Title: Apart Author: ML Email: msnsc21@aol.com Feedback: always welcome Distribution: Ephemeral, Gossamer, Enigmatic Dr. and Spookys, yes; if you've archived me before, yes; if not, please just let me know and leave headers, email addy, etc. attached. Thanks! Spoilers: through Trust_No1 Rating: PG-13 Classification: SRA Keywords: Mulder/Scully Romance, Adventure Summary: I knew this day would come. I've known it for a long time. Disclaimer: Mulder and Scully aren't mine, and neither are the Lone Gunmen. They mostly belong to the actors who portray them, but Chris Carter created them, and Ten Thirteen and FOX own the rights. I mean no infringement, and I'm not making any profit from them. Author's notes: This is set in the same universe as the "Abandoned" series, told from Mulder's POV. You don't have to read "Abandoned" to get this, but I hope you will, anyway. Find it here: www.kimpart.com/mlfic.html More author's notes and acknowledgments at the end of Part 5. ===== Apart 1: Escape by ML I knew this day would come. I've known it for a long time. I'd even prepared for it, somewhat. Knowing all that doesn't make it any easier. Scully can barely look at me. I know that it's just because she doesn't want me to see her cry. I, on the other hand, can't take my eyes off her, or William. Even William is affected by this. He's fussy this morning; Scully has been walking him up and down, up and down. None of us got much sleep last night. Scully broke her iron rule and brought William to bed with us. He lay between us, and we spoke softly to each other, and to him. We didn't speak of anything profound. We didn't talk about my impending departure. We just tried to be a family for the short time we had. I couldn't get enough of touching Scully or William. I tucked Scully's hair behind her ear, cupped her cheek or her chin, leaned across William to touch her lips with mine. I brushed my finger over William's velvet cheek, let him wrap his tiny fingers around mine. I'll remember how that felt for the rest of my life. We didn't make any promises to each other. We didn't have to; we already knew that we would do our damnedest to be together again. Saying the words again wouldn't make them any more true. Scully slept a little, and I held her and William in my arms, and thought about what lay ahead. I can do it, I thought. I've been alone most of my life. I'll miss Scully, and William, but it's not forever. I got up and put William in his crib and stood watching him. He slept on, oblivious to our turmoil. My son. I'd seen many impossible things in my lifetime, but he was by far the most amazing one I'd ever beheld. Scully's miracle. Our son. Maybe the world's salvation. It was a terrible burden to lay on a small baby. I wondered what thoughts went through my father's head when he first saw me. Did he know, even then, how I'd become involved in the lies he helped form and foster? Did he hope to protect me? Or had he always intended to use me for his own ends? To "broker fate," as he once put it, using my life as a bargaining chip? I wouldn't allow that to happen to William. Not our son. I crawled back into bed and wrapped myself around Scully again. She made a low sound and curled back against me. I can do this. I can leave her. It's for the best. It's not forever. It was a very long night, but not long enough. I stayed watchful throughout, holding Scully, looking at her, letting her sleep as long as I could. Thinking about what the day would bring. "Hey, Scully," I whispered as the dawn began to seep into the room. "Are you awake?" "Mmmmm," she sighed. "Time's it?" "I've got to go soon," I told her. "But listen, I have to tell you something..." She turned in my embrace and faced me, her eyes searching mine. "What is it, Mulder?" I just looked at her for a minute. Yes, I can do this. I can. "Scully, I..." I cleared my throat a little. "I love you." Her eyes filled with tears and I filled with panic. I can't do this. Yes, you can. You have to. She buried her head against my shoulder. "I love you too, Mulder," I heard her muffled voice. I felt her tears on my skin. We finally managed to say the words, now that it's almost too late. x-x-x-x The taxi's here. It takes me a couple of trips to get the bags loaded. Scully stands by and watches, holding William. He's gone quiet now, and watchful. I can't delay the inevitable any longer. I take William from Scully's arms and hold him close, burying my nose into the folds of his neck, feeling his tiny hand brush against my cheek. I've got to remember what this feels like. Scully takes William from my arms and kisses him, then puts him in his porta-crib. I open my arms to her and she comes to me. We stand like this for a long time, just holding each other as tightly as we can. Scully is the only thing that anchors me to this life. I cup her face in my hands, and kiss her again and again, storing up the feelings and sensations for the long, lonely time ahead. I knew this day would come. But I always thought that Scully would be going with me. As the taxi drives away, I wonder if I've left it too late. I don't think about how I might never see Scully, or William, again. I can't afford to think that way. But I do think of other missed opportunities. x-x-x-x I'd always known that a time might come when I'd need to go underground. The first time the X-Files got taken from me, I started thinking about it. After my escape from the boxcar in New Mexico, it seemed like the perfect opportunity to disappear. But I had to go back for Scully. I knew even then that I couldn't do it alone. I didn't ask her after all. I had nothing to offer her, and she'd already given up so much. And when Skinner showed up and told her about Melissa, I left the decision to Scully. I couldn't blame her for making the choice to go back. I might have considered going off on my own, but in only a few short years, Scully had become as important to me as Samantha. We were too late for Melissa. Scully added another layer of grief; I added a little more guilt to my own burden. All the same, when we got back, I started planning more seriously for our eventual disappearance. I enlisted the help of the Gunmen. For all my teasing of them, and the rude comments I sometimes make about them, I have a lot of respect for what they're capable of doing. I would never have gotten to Scully in Antarctica in time if it hadn't been for the Gunmen. I didn't think that much about it at the time. All my focus was on getting to Scully, and getting her out. I didn't question how they did what they did. *Why* they did what they did wasn't just for me, I know. All I've ever had to do is mention Scully's name, and they've fallen all over themselves to help. In fact, once I introduced Scully to them, I started to get the feeling that they'd do more for her than they would for me. They took sides with her over Diana Fowley (which in retrospect should have told me something about Diana). They watched over her when I was abducted, and probably did more to help her find me than anyone in the FBI did, and I include her other *partner* in that. x-x-x-x The taxi pulls up to the station. This is a pretty busy commuter hub, and it's just getting into the prime time hour. It makes it harder for me to see if anyone's followed me, but I think it will be harder for anyone to figure out where I'm going, too. If anyone cares. I didn't see anyone following us to the train station, and a glance around doesn't reveal any watchers that I can see. There's always the possibility of video surveillance, of course. The cameras are everywhere. They've proliferated in recent years, almost to the point where they've become part of the background. I'm sure the average person hardly thinks about them anymore. I think about them all the time. I've been surveiled covertly too many times not to. I know the Gunmen sweep Scully's apartment regularly but they've taken to leaving the bugs where they've found them. They always get replaced, anyway. We've found other ways to prevent Them from seeing and hearing what we want to keep private. They might be less vigilant in their watching now that I'm out of the picture but somehow I doubt it. They know who the important one is, has always been, in our partnership. It takes a while to purchase the tickets, partly because I have to wait in line at two different windows. At the first window, I buy a ticket for the first train heading for Arizona. I check some of my luggage, and get back in line for ticket number two, to Florida, and check some more luggage through. I've purchased one under my real name, and the other under "George Hale," a pseudonym I've used often enough that the bad guys probably know it as well as my own. I have a third ticket, purchased a few days ago by Langly, under the name "Michael Orr." This will be my nom de guerre for now. It's not a name I've used with anyone but the Gunmen. Scully knows George Hale, and she knows Marty Mulder (though that's one I wish she'd never heard). Scully has an email address for me, but I doubt it will take long for anyone conducting surveillance to figure out whose it is. We've agreed to use it on a very limited basis. It seemed smarter to have *some* form of communication that can be discovered and monitored by the bad guys. Maybe it will keep them from digging much deeper. I've developed other ways of communicating with the Gunmen. They'll be my main link with my old life, and with Scully. x-x-x-x I still didn't fully appreciate my importance relative to Scully in the Gunmen's view until Frohike set me straight. Even though I was pissed at the Gunmen after the fiasco at the records facility, I ended up at their place in the early morning hours after leaving Scully's. I was going to take Langly to task for his smartass comment about the parentage of the baby, but Frohike forestalled me. "When are you gonna wake up and smell the coffee, Mulder?" "What the hell are you talking about?" I was spoiling for a fight. I blamed them, I blamed Doggett, anyone but myself for what happened at the facility. I knew even then that's not the only thing I was pissed about. Scully and I had already fought that night. I guess I still needed to take it out on someone. "You really don't know what Scully's been through, do you?" Frohike continued. It was very brave of him, actually. It was a measure of how highly he -- and Byers and Langly -- thought of Scully. And one more example of how everyone was able to go on without me. At least, that's how it seemed to me. "Get your head out of your ass, Mulder," Frohike said. "You know how it was for you when Scully was missing? Well, what do you think she went through while you were gone? You think it was any easier for her than it was for you?" "Looks like she did okay to me," I mumbled, but my heart wasn't in it. Arguing with Scully had already raised my consciousness, so to speak. I guess I deserved the reaming I got from her, and from the Gunmen, that night. "She's never gonna tell you," Frohike said. "But she went through freakin' hell the whole time you were gone. I know you don't like Agent Doggett much, but if it hadn't been for him -- and for Skinner -- I don't think Scully would have survived your abduction any better than you did." I was silent. What could I say? I didn't want to think about how I was when Scully was gone. I didn't handle myself very well. There was no way I could blame Scully for doing whatever she needed to do, if she felt even half as lost as I did when she was gone. Of course, just because I agreed with Frohike doesn't mean I went to Scully and apologized. But the argument we had seemed to clear the air, a little. Even so, nothing was the same; how could it be, with Scully pregnant? I thought it might take me another seven years to get back into her good graces. It didn't look like I would ever get reinstated with the FBI, either, and I began to think that maybe I should stop trying. With Kersh back in charge, I knew it would be battle after battle. It didn't surprise me when Kersh fired me. I was asking for it, pretty obviously. What surprised me is that he fell for it. I guess it is true that he's simply another pawn, someone who doesn't know the full story. He let his disdain for me, and what I'd been working for, get in the way of the larger agenda. He thinks he's protected by those he serves, just as Blevins did. He'll find out the truth, when he's no longer needed. And with any luck, anyone I care about -- or whom Scully cares about -- in the FBI will be long gone. After I was fired, I started thinking seriously again about going underground, and asking Scully if she'd be willing to go, too. No way did I intend to leave her behind. That was before we had the partial abruption scare. I couldn't ask her to leave after that. I'd just have to hang in there until after the baby was born, and it was safe to travel again. It was a simple plan, and one doomed to failure. The closer Scully got to her due date, the greater the danger was. And William's birth was fraught with as much danger as it would have been if we had gone underground. Hindsight is a wonderful thing. x-x-x-x I have a couple of hours before my train leaves. I wander around the station a little, looking at it in a way that I'd never done before. It was just a station before, a stop on the way to somewhere else. The echoes and whispers eddy around me and I feel a sharp sense of loss. I'd just started getting the hang of my old life, I thought. I'm not ready to start a new one just yet. Not alone, anyway. x-x-x-x We had about a week together after William was born. All the time, I tried to think of ways to ask Scully to disappear with me. I'd been hearing some pretty disturbing things on the FBI front. It seemed that Doggett's declared investigation of Deputy Director Kersh had stirred up quite a hornet's nest. The backlash looked to be landing squarely on Scully, and by extension, me. I knew that they would find a way to use one of us against the other, and the surest way to prevent that was to take preemptive action. Maybe we've just played into their hands, doing this. But we had to think fast, and this seemed the best path to take. When I finally asked her, I got the answer I knew I would get. "Mulder, I can't," she said softly. We were sitting on her couch. She leaned her head against my shoulder; William had just fallen asleep at her breast. "Not just because of William. You know there are other reasons, too." I nodded. "I know, Scully. But I think I have to go. You'll be safer if I'm not here." She looked about to object, but I kept on. "Think about it, Scully. I'm not in the FBI anymore, I don't have their resources. Yet if I stay here, every move I make to find the truth, to keep you and William safe, will be monitored. I need to find some answers, Scully, and I don't think I can find them here. They'll never leave us alone." Scully didn't try to say anything this time. She waited for me to say my piece. "I told you I'd do anything to keep you and William safe. It didn't work to send you away; They found you anyway. I just get the strong feeling that if I go, you'll be safer than if I stay here." Finally, Scully spoke. Her tone broke my heart. "Mulder, there was a time when we wouldn't have let anything separate us. How can we let them do it now?" "You have so much more to lose now, Scully. And I do, too," I said. "You know it as well as I do." I gathered her closer, mindful of William in her arms. "I still can't lose you, Scully." "Mulder, I don't want to lose you again, either," she said. "When you left the FBI--" "When I was *fired* from the FBI," I corrected her with a smile. She nodded, but she didn't smile back. "I thought somehow that you'd be safe. I didn't want to have to worry about you out in the field, with no one to watch your back..." "It won't be forever, Scully," I reassured her as best I could. "But things are different now. You have someone else to watch over. I'll have to be the big boy, and take care of myself, while you take care of the little boy." She smiled a little at that, but she wasn't convinced. I know Scully would have come with me if she'd been able. We told each other that we'd be together again, as soon as it was safe. I'd either come back to her, or she'd find a way to come to me. I hope I'll be able to come back. I know how hard it will be for Scully to live life on the run. Never to see her mother again, to give up her entire life, for me? I'm not sure she can do it. I'm not sure she *should* do it. I'm not sure it's good for her, or for our son. What's worse, living on the run with Mom and Dad, or being somewhere relatively safe with just Mom? And are they safe where they are? Are they safer with me, or without me? I also worry that yet another separation from Scully will make it all that much harder for us to regain the ground we lost when I was abducted. Scully would laugh to hear me say that I want a normal life, and that's not it, really. I just want a life with Scully. The concern I voiced so long ago, when Scully was given the chance for motherhood, has happened. Having a child *has* come between us, but not in the way I'd originally imagined it would. Neither of us intended for it to happen. Not in the way it did, anyway. I don't regret the miracle that is William, not for a moment. What I mean to say is, when Scully asked me to help her have a child, I didn't want the *process* to come between us. Success or failure of the IVF notwithstanding, I still wanted the chance to build a relationship with Scully which had nothing to do with having a child with her. I had trouble expressing this to Scully, mainly because I was afraid to be too open with her. My intention was always for her to realize how I felt without having to tell her. Yes, I'm a chickenshit. But the times I tried to tell her never seemed to come out the way I intended, and she never seemed to quite believe me. Simply put: I love Dana Scully. I want to have a life with her, baby or no baby. I was afraid that having a baby with her would hinder what I saw as a developing personal relationship. Sounds paradoxical, but there it is. Nothing has ever come easily to us, whether it's a piece of the truth or a kiss. Here's another paradox: The IVF wasn't successful, but it *did* result in Scully and me becoming closer. Not right away, of course. But it started us on the path that, as it turned out, we both very much wanted to take. In many ways, I've been one lucky son of a bitch. Abduction and death aside, of course. x-x-x-x I talked to the Gunmen for a long time before I left. I wanted to be sure that they will keep an eye on Scully and William. I know they'll do their best to help us both. I hope that some of the things they've been working on will be successful, and soon. I don't know if the fate of the world hangs in the balance, but mine does. I need Scully with me. I'm counting on them to side with her this time. I need them to watch her back for me. I trust that Skinner and Doggett will do their best to protect Scully too, but they can't understand the extent of my fears. Skinner has actually come a long way down the road to believing; he's learned about things the hard way, too, just the way Scully has. He's sustained personal losses along the way, and had to do some terrible things that I know probably still haunt him. As for Doggett...well, I know he's not a believer. But he may come to it, in time. Scully told me about some of the cases they'd been involved in, and his reaction to them. I got a glimpse of it myself on my last *official* investigation as part of the FBI. But when it came down to it, he did his best to protect Scully, no matter what he believes. Scully wouldn't thank me for pulling this protective-male bullshit, which is why I didn't say any of it to the Gunmen when she was around. I can rely on them, just as I can rely on Skinner and Doggett. I haven't told the latter two that I'm leaving. They'll find out when Scully tells them. The fewer people who know what we're planning, the better. x-x-x-x Most of my luggage goes on board with one or the other of the new reservations. I board the third train as "Michael Orr" with one duffel bag and my laptop. With any luck, the other stuff will sit in the unclaimed luggage office for a while at their destination. Though they might search them, times being what they are. It doesn't matter. They won't find much of interest. Just enough to show that they really belonged to me, and throw any pursuers off the track. I hope. I settle into my seat and look out onto the platform. I don't see anything unusual. No one who seems to be watching in the crowd; there's no one talking to the conductor. And no one to see me off. I continue to watch the platform out my window. I see a trio approach the train: a man, a woman, and a small boy. The man lifts the boy up onto his shoulders, and though I can't hear through the thick glass, I know he's squealing with joy. The man swings him down again with a kiss, and leans in to kiss the woman. I turn away for a moment; even though they can't see me, I give them their privacy. The man stands on the platform, waving, as the woman and the boy climb onto the train. With a sharp jerk and a swaying sensation, the train begins its departure. It's been years since I've ridden the train. We chose it as the mode of transportation because it seemed I might still be able to keep some anonymity, as compared to air travel. It also gives me a bit more privacy. I've taken a roomette. I'll be able to think, and grieve, without anyone seeing me. I'm doing the right thing, I tell myself. It's better this way. I need to have Scully and William safe while I pursue the answers I need to *keep* them safe. The world outside my window has become blurred. I'm not sure if it's the speed of the train, or the tears in my eyes. It's official; I've run away. I've gone to ground. I can only hope that I will find the answers I need before I lose my resolve. x-x-x-x The first day without Scully is very long. I stay locked in my compartment, bent over my laptop for most of the day. I don't want to waste a moment. I also don't want to think too much about who I've left behind. I add to my growing list of questions. Are these super soldiers truly created by a government program, or are they some new form of human/alien hybrid? How did Billy Miles come to be? Had the government been conducting experiments on Billy and his friends at the time of our first visit to Bellefleur? Most important of all, can they be destroyed? Krycek said not, but he's been wrong before. He had a flair for the dramatic, and changed his stories more often than he changed his socks. He told the truth just often enough for me not to discount his words entirely. There are many possible avenues for exploration. Billy Miles. Knowle Rohrer. Maybe even Colonel Budahas. The Gunmen were checking out what they could on their end; I am the man in the field. And what about William? Once again, we have Krycek's assertion that he is "more human than human." Here also we have Lizzy Gill's corroboration that he's "special." He looked pretty ordinary to me, the little I got to see of him. More human than human. No human frailties. It doesn't make sense. William has been examined from head to toe, and he exhibits no abnormalities of any kind. I hope that it's true, but the realist in me (how Scully would laugh to hear me call myself a realist) knows that it can't be that simple. Monica Reyes told me about the odd events surrounding William's birth. How the ranger insisted that William would be born, and how these -- beings -- crowded into the little building to witness it. And then, they just went away. "Mulder, I never felt so helpless in my life," Scully confided in me later that night. We were in a hospital in Atlanta, where I pulled all the strings I could to get Scully a private room where she could have William with her. I found out later that Skinner had called and done a little string-pulling and weight-throwing himself. I wish I'd known then that our time at the hospital was almost all the time we'd have together. I tried to make the most of it. I slept in Scully's room, vigilant over the baby as she slept. When she was awake, I sat as close as I could to her and held her hand as she recalled the pain and terror of William's birth. "I wanted you there so badly, Mulder," she whispered. She was still exhausted and her guard was down, or she might never have said anything to me. I stroked her hair with my free hand. "I wanted to be there," I said. "Not that I'd have made a better midwife than Agent Reyes." "I don't understand, Mulder," she started to say, and I watched as her eyes fluttered shut and she struggled to open them again. "Don't worry about it right now," I said softly. I leaned over and kissed her forehead. "Get some rest, we can talk more later." I held her hand until she fell asleep and let myself out of the room to find Skinner waiting. Skinner and Doggett filled me in on Knowle Rohrer and Agent Crane's supposed demise, and their connection with Kersh. "I'd lay low for a while, Mulder," Skinner advised. "You mean, stop investigating?" I asked. "You could order me around in the past, but not now." "Calm down, Mulder, I'm not trying to order you," Skinner said. "I'm suggesting that you think of the danger you might be putting Scully and the baby in by continuing the way you have in the past." That hit home. It was a whole new ball game, and a whole new set of problems. I would not be allowed to live quietly with my new family. Eventually the devil outside would find a way in. Unless, of course, I found a way to beat him at his own game. That's what I started to think about in the intervening days, and what I began to discuss with the Gunmen. Scully was of course in on some of the discussion, but I didn't tell her everything. I didn't want to raise her hopes too high, or to frighten her needlessly. She was going to have a hard enough time in the months ahead. The day before I left, I said my good-byes to the Gunmen. "You take care of Scully and William, or I'll come back and kick your asses," I said. "Take care of yourself, Mulder, or Scully will kick our asses, and yours, too," Frohike said, hugging me again. I backed away before I started getting too emotional, and went home to Scully for the last time. x-x-x-x I have a long layover in Chicago, during which I resist the urge to call or email just to let Scully know I'm okay. I have a couple of old Hotmail addresses that I rarely use; Scully would likely figure out who the message was from, but it seems stupid to risk it. I hope that I can continue to resist the temptation until it's time to contact her as agreed. Instead, I buy every tabloid I can get my hands on in the Chicago station, so I'll have something to while away the sleepless hours. I've already been on the train nearly twenty-four hours and the thought of two more days is making me a little stir-crazy. Late that night, unable to sleep, I prowl the cars. The observation lounge is empty; I sit in one of the swivel chairs and look out over the dark landscape. Have I done the right thing in leaving Scully and William? Is it too late to turn around and go back? In spite of myself, I think of Scully. I imagine her lying in bed, head half buried in her pillow, her breathing soft and steady. I see her eyelids flutter, and hope she's dreaming of me. It had been my secret pleasure to watch Scully sleep on the rare nights I stayed with her, and I'm grateful for the memories now. How could I not realize how much I'd miss her? x-x-x-x It's late afternoon on the fourth day out of DC when I finally arrive in Portland, Oregon. I feel travel-stained and weary. I've let my beard grow the last few days. I know I look pretty scruffy. I head out walking from the station, and soon I'm in a part of town that's seen better days. I see hotels that are a step or two down from some of the places Scully and I have stayed over the years. I can afford better, but right now all I want is a place to crash for the night. I come upon a shabby brick building that calls itself The Queens Head Hotel. I wonder if it ever lived up to its rather elegant name. A smaller sign just below it says, "A Smoke and Drug-free Environment." The price is certainly right, and the room is clean though devoid of charm or amenities of any kind. I've stayed in worse places. I'd asked at the desk about places to eat, and the desk clerk gave me directions for a few nearby cafes. "No cooking in the rooms," he admonished me. "I wouldn't dream of it," I told him, and dragged myself up the stairs. It's only mid-afternoon but I decide to take a nap before doing anything else. I pull off my shoes and lie on the bed, hoping for a few minutes' rest. I feel like I'm still on the train. As soon as I close my eyes, I can feel the vibrations. The silence after the constant sound and motion of the train presses on my ears. I'm drifting, floating, not thinking at all, when I feel a jerk and see a blinding flash, even with my eyes closed. My eyes fly open and I feel the restraints on my arms and legs. I hear the high whine of the drills and sense the eyes of the Others on me. I open my mouth to scream for Scully but no sound comes out. I see the drill accelerate as it approaches. I can't even shut my eyes; all I can do is lie helpless as it comes closer and closer, and I try to brace myself against the memory of the unearthly pain. I hear Duane Barry's voice in my head as I try to scream: ohgodno notagain saveme it'scoming somebodystopit don'ttakeme noooooooo... ...the light blinks out, the drills stop abruptly, and I'm left alone in the dark. ===== end of Part One; continued in Part Two. ===== Apart 2: Alone by ML When I finally recover from the nightmare or flashback or whatever the hell it is, I get myself out of the room and go in search of distraction. Anything to keep my brain from going there again. I walk until I find one of the cafes the desk clerk told me about. "Happy Palace Fine Chinese Cuisine" the sign says. Like the hotel, it has a seen-better-days shabbiness about it. Inside, it looks, and smells, like every other Chinese restaurant I've ever been in. It makes me homesick for Scully. Too many memories of sitting in motel rooms, eating take-out as we argued about the current investigation. Too many images of Scully delicately lifting a piece of shrimp up to her lips with her chopsticks, more often than not making me drop whatever I was eating into my lap. She had no idea how much I loved to watch her eat. I used to order French fries just so she could steal them off my plate. I eat quickly, hardly tasting what I ordered, washing it down with scalding green tea. I crush the fortune cookie and pick at the pieces of it, turning the slip of paper over to see what it says. "There is a prospect of a thrilling time ahead for you." Oh, joy. Too much like the ancient curse, "may you live in interesting times." I crumple up the scrap of paper and leave my money on the table. I wander around downtown, finally ending up in a bar. I'm not so much interested in a drink as I am in a distraction. I hope to exhaust myself so that I can finally get some sleep without having another episode. This is one of the secrets I've kept from Scully, and another reason I had to leave. Since my return, I've been having flashbacks from my time on the ship. They were really bad that first week I came back. I told Scully I needed some time. I didn't tell her why. Scully wouldn't be surprised that I'm having nightmares, but these are more than that. I think they're recovered memories, and they come at me like a blow from a sledgehammer. I started having them in the hospital after I found out what had happened to me during my abduction. I sneaked a look at my file when I was waiting for the doctor to come and examine me. I know that eventually I could have coerced Scully into telling me what happened, but I hadn't really wanted to ask her. I hadn't wanted to ask her anything at first: not about me, not about her. Especially not about her. I think I was more afraid of what she would say about her condition, and how she got that way, than about anything else. The notes in the file were sketchy. The initial report was what really got my attention: "Patient exhumed after approximately 3 months burial. Decomposition commensurate with time frame; however, faint vital signs detected." Appended to this report was the M.E.'s report from Montana, co-signed by D.K. Scully, M.D. No autopsy report, just a "non-invasive examination for causes of death, per the order of A.D. Skinner, FBI." I hated to think of Scully having to participate in this, but I had an idea that she wouldn't have stayed away willingly. In fact, she probably insisted on being there. I remembered that I'd asked her to perform the autopsy on my mother; she probably knew that I'd insist she examine me if I'd been able to. I don't know why no autopsy was performed but it goes without saying I'm very grateful there wasn't. Decomposition. I'd been decomposing. That's a hell of a thing to wake up to. Until I read that report I'd no idea how or where I'd been found, or what shape I'd been in. Yes, I knew I'd been abducted and returned, and I felt like shit when I first woke up, but I've woken up in hospitals so often, at first it didn't seem that different from all the other times. I couldn't tear my eyes away from the description of my injuries. I touched my cheeks and felt the wounds. I traced my hand down my sternum, feeling the scar. I touched my tongue to the roof of my mouth. I looked at my wrists and ankles, seeing the puncture marks. I began to remember. I closed my eyes and saw it all: the chair with the restraints, the bright lights, the whirring drills. The cold, inhuman eyes of my captors. I heard my screams over the whine of the drill. I almost screamed again, the vision was so vivid. The flashbacks continued after Scully took me home. I had no control over them. Waking or sleeping, they'd come over me with no warning. Sometimes I felt paralyzed by them. Other times, I must have fought back. I'd come to and find a table turned over, a lamp smashed. I know the signs of PTSD. I *am* a psychologist, after all. But I couldn't see myself going to anyone for treatment. I felt that the best cure would be to find out exactly what happened, and how to prevent it happening to me, or anyone, ever again. The last thing I wanted to do was subject Scully to my nightmares. I know what she went through with her abduction, and how she hated remembering anything about it. She saw what had been done to me; she examined my body when I was dead, and after I was exhumed. There was no need for her to suffer through those agonies again. I wish I could keep myself from suffering too, but I think the only way to help myself is to confront it. My plan is to visit Bellefleur, and maybe even Montana. Maybe it's just as well Scully didn't come with me. She'd insist on going to those places with me, and though it might be comforting to me to have her there, I couldn't have asked her to do it. I'm not sure what I expect to find there. Maybe some clues, maybe nothing. At least it's a step toward understanding what happened to me, and at least I'm not having holes drilled in my head to get at the truth. I'm not sure I'll ever be able to face a drill again, of any kind. So much for my garage workshop. Sorry Scully, can't make you a bookshelf, I'm afraid of the drills and saws. Not to mention the vises and the routers. I grimace into my beer at the direction my thoughts have taken me. Scully would frown with concern, even as I tried to make her laugh. She'd try not to, but I'd be able to tell. I stay at the bar until closing time, and walk back to the hotel. It's very cold out, and the streets are quiet. I can tell that there are homeless people huddled in the doorways, looking like nothing so much as bundles of old clothes. I think back to the alley in Atlantic City where I went searching for the beast woman. At the time, I couldn't comprehend anyone choosing to live that way. Now it seems appealing in an odd way. To disappear off the face of the earth, have no name, no one knowing or caring where you were. It could happen to me. I imagine myself shuffling along, hair long and matted, scraggly beard, muttering something about the invasion, shrieking in my sleep when the nightmares come. What makes me so different from these people? What makes me think I deserve to live a normal life? Let this be a warning to you, Mulder. x-x-x-x The second day in Portland dawns cold and rainy, entirely suitable to my mood. I plan to do a little research here for a couple of days, until I have the guts to head over to Bellefleur. As expected, I didn't get much sleep the night before, but at least I was able to take a shower in a full-size bathroom. I check out of the hotel and start walking toward the business district. I stop at the first bus stop and ask the driver what line to take to get to the library. I stop in at a nearby Starbuck's (there seems to be at least two coffee shops on every block) to wait until the library opens. I order a coffee and bagel and sit down to watch the passing parade, a stranger in a strange land. I'm finding that my new life has many unexpected dimensions. Maybe it's being in a strange place that sharpens my perceptions and memory. It's the little things that I miss most, things I'd taken for granted in my former existence, and that I'd barely begun to appreciate again upon my return. Practically the first words out of my mouth when I revived were, "Did anybody miss me?" I was referring, of course, to Scully, but as it happens, more people missed me than I thought possible. The first time I stopped in at the convenience store down the street from my apartment, the owner smiled and extended his hand to me. "Welcome back," he said, trying not to stare at the fading scars on my cheeks. I'd never done more than exchange a few words with him, yet he remembered me, and not in a bad way. The girl behind the counter at the Starbuck's also gave me a huge smile when I came in. "Haven't seen you in a while," she said. "Your usual?" I nodded, sort of pleased that I had a "usual" when everything in my life seemed anything but. I was a bit surprised when she called to the barista, "One large Americano, extra hot, and one grande nonfat soy latte, low foam." How could I have forgotten that my "usual" had always included Scully? I shook my head. "Sorry, just the Americano," I said with an apologetic smile. Until I'd gone missing and came back, I'd never noticed those things. The biggest hole in my life, of course, is the one where Scully belongs. I'd told Scully, in a sort of self-pitying way, that I didn't know where I fit in anymore. I could see how much it hurt her, though of course she didn't say. I was so tired, and so disoriented from all that had happened to me, that I couldn't spare a thought to what Scully had gone through while I was gone. At first, I did my best to wedge myself back in. I thought work was the answer, and I as much as told Scully that. I tried to go back to the office, tried to get back involved in the X-Files, but it felt like I was just going through the motions. I don't think they expected me to leave. I don't think they expected me to accept my firing without a fight. I think they thought I'd follow my usual pattern of trying to break in somewhere, or publicly threaten Kersh, or some other foolish act that the old Fox Mulder would have done. Guess I've learned something over the years, huh? Some of their techniques are starting to rub off on me. Lay low. Work in the shadows. Don't ever tell anyone everything, keep it all on a "need to know" basis. That means leaving almost everyone out of the loop as far as the big picture is concerned. I'm not sure I know everything myself. The hard part of all this is the amount I'm forced to keep from Scully. Yeah, she's used to me withholding information from her, but not like this. I just hope it doesn't come back and bite me on the ass one of these days. All the same, I wouldn't put this on a par with the biggest secret I've ever kept from her. She didn't know that when I was abducted, my days were already numbered. I hardly wanted to think about it myself, though by then I was intimately acquainted with the details, and my doctor assured me that there was nothing to be done about it. It started out subtly. I'd be going along fine, and then I'd have an episode of debilitating pain, not unlike a migraine. Sometimes it was only a few seconds in duration. Sometimes it would be a low, dull throbbing that went on for hours or sometimes, days. I ignored it for a long time. I knew it wasn't what had afflicted me before; I heard no voices or high-pitched ringing. Eventually I quietly visited a specialist. After an enormous number of tests which turned up nothing, he concluded that I had some sort of degenerative disease the likes of which he'd never seen before. And since he'd never seen it before, he had no idea how to treat it. The best he could do was monitor it, keep track of my "decline." Well, there's a surprise. Didn't I say that nothing is ever simple for us? I didn't want to tell Scully. I didn't even tell the Gunmen, because I was sure *they'd* tell Scully. I remembered too well how helpless I felt when Scully was ill, and I somehow knew there was nothing she could do. I didn't want her making any Faustian bargains on my behalf. When she disappeared with Smoking Man, I thought somehow she'd found out, and she was doing exactly that. I was really angry with her, but also disappointed that the science he'd promised her wasn't there. It might have helped me. There would be no miracle cure for me. I felt that what had happened to me on the operating table had probably caused this, and that since they'd left me to die there, every minute I had since then was a bonus. Pretty fatalistic, isn't it? I did try to find answers, and I did what I could to find a cure. But there were limits to what I would do. Maybe part of me always believed that everyone would be better off if I was gone. Scully could go have her normal life, and certainly no one else would miss me much. There were a couple of opportunities I explored, not long before I was abducted. I couldn't bring myself to avail myself of either of them, because to do so would have caused more pain and suffering for someone else. It just didn't seem right. Somehow I was able to keep it from Scully. I hadn't intended to do it forever; in fact, just before the last trip to Oregon, I almost told her. But at that time, I was worried about her. She hadn't been feeling well, and I lived in fear that it was a recurrence of her cancer. Illness or no, I didn't intend to get abducted. I didn't go willingly on the ship. After I was returned, and Scully and I finally began to talk about things again, I told her that. Even though I knew my illness was serious, I wouldn't have purposely done anything to take me from Scully sooner. We wasted some time on recriminations when I got back. Yes, I'm guilty, too. I didn't understand how Scully had gotten pregnant, and it seemed to bear out my theory that she'd been able to move on without me. I was jealous of her partner, jealous that she'd been able to keep on while I was missing. She did a hell of a lot better than I did when she was taken. She finally had to spell everything out for me. What an idiot I was. We wasted so much time not listening to each other. Hell, the truth is, *I* wasted time not listening to her. And by the time I was ready to listen, she wasn't talking any more. I know I hurt her feelings by expressing my fears and doubts about the baby she carried. I was scared. We'd both seen too much, and I was too familiar with Scully in denial. I knew how much the baby meant to her. It meant a lot to me, too, and I wasn't just scared for Scully. It could have turned out so very badly. I still don't understand why it didn't. I was not prepared for the way I felt the first time I saw William. Up until that point, even with the evidence before my eyes, the idea of Scully as a mother seemed purely theoretical. The idea of me being a father, even more so. But as soon as I saw William in Scully's arms, squalling for all he was worth, I knew beyond a doubt. I would do anything to keep him safe. Anything. x-x-x-x The library finally opens and I head for one of the computer terminals. I'm lucky to get one right away instead of having to sign a waiting list. I log on and go to the "Weluvcheezstks" list. Michael Orr, among others, has belonged to this list for many years. It just so happens that Langly is the moderator for that group. I can leave a message there any time and know that it will get to them. There are also certain newsgroups where I can leave messages, though I tend to avoid the obvious ones with words like "aliens" or "conspiracy" in the title. I visit alt.tv.xena and post stuff about weaponry, especially those involving iron ore. The guys thought it would be funny if I posted to alt.tv.lostinspace but I vetoed that. The guys put a lot of stock in the newsgroups. They tell me that there are a lot of highly intelligent and knowledgible people who frequent these lists, and they've often gotten leads to the answers they sought. I can't really naysay them; the one time I met someone from a list I used to frequent, she seemed to be pretty knowledgible, if a bit anti-social. I don't think Scully liked her much, though. This list isn't very active, though Langly told me once that there are about two hundred legitimate subscribers. I see that "leerjet01" (Frohike) has posted within the last hour and I take a chance and post a message. --- geobounce13: subj: see the game last nite? The Wizards sucked. --- I go check some other websites and come back in a few minutes to see that leerjet01 has posted a reply. --- leerjet01: subj: re: see the game last nite? Care to step outside & say that? --- The message means that Frohike's opened a chatroom. Once I enter, the private chat window comes up. --- leerjet01: you ok? geobounce13: been worse. got to first destination. anything new on the home front? leerjet01: same old. if you go to Xena, check out the heavy metal thread. L asked the question you wanted. geobounce13: ok. how are they? leerjet01: they're ok. geobounce13: seen them? leerjet01: yesterday. geobounce13: gotta go. let me know...let her know. leerjet01: will do. don't worry. ***leerjet01 has left the chatroom*** --- It wasn't a very satisfying exchange, but at least I know that as of yesterday, Scully and William were safe. Nothing else to report. No news is good news, I tell myself. I do a little more research before my time runs out and spend the rest of the day reviewing the news archives for stories about strange lights in the sky, or amything else that might be relevant to me. The events of last year actually got a mention in the Portland paper, back in the regional section. "BELLEFLEUR. Reports of a plane crash in the forest outside of this small fishing village were greatly exaggerated, local law enforcement says. `I don't know how these rumors get started,' says Detective Miles. "Bellefleur has long been known for sightings of unidentified lights in the sky that no one has ever been able to explain. "'I think it's the local Chamber of Commerce, trying to generate some tourist dollars,' Detective Miles continued. `Don't put too much stock in it. You get lost out in that forest, you might just stay lost.'" No kidding. I almost did. x-x-x-x It's no surprise that nights are the worst time. The libraries are closed. I don't want to go to a bar or anyplace else that reminds me of how solitary my life has become. All I can do is go back to my room and type up my notes, and think. I can get by on minimal sleep; I always have. That's especially a good thing, now. I'm afraid if I have a particularly bad nightmare, someone might hear and call the cops. I still do a lot of channel-surfing, naturally. But the types of shows that used to lull me asleep before don't work the way they used to. Scully has ruined me for adult entertainment. My main entertainment now is thinking about her. Where once all I had was fantasy, I now have memories. I'm grateful for them, but it goes without saying that I'd rather have the real thing. It isn't the first time I've had to rely on my memories to keep me sane. All the time I was gone, no matter what horrible things were done to me -- and frankly, I'm doing my best to allow *those* memories to remain hazy -- I had a place to go, to escape to. And that place was where Scully lived. I went there to be with her whenever I could. I started with the memory of our first time together. It's a very clear memory, and I don't think I've added too much to it. Even at the time, I did my best to file every moment away to be taken out and pored over. Perpetual pessimist that I am, I wasn't taking any chances. If this turned out to be a one-time thing, I was going to make the absolute best of it. Well, that wasn't the only reason. Of course, I wanted to please Scully as much as I wanted this for myself. I wanted to remember that I'd given her something to treasure, as well as myself. Not to mention that I thought I might earn myself a return engagement if I did really, really well. My track record hadn't been too good up to that point. I'd given up trying to let Scully know how I felt. I'd done my best. It was up to Scully now to let me know if she was interested in taking our relationship any further. The night Scully finally made her move was like a lot of other nights we'd spent in each other's company. We'd had dinner, discussed a case we were working on, until I decided I'd better call it a night. I was on the point of leaving. I had my coat on, and Scully walked me to the door, which she usually did. Sometimes we hugged goodbye, sometimes there'd be just a quick peck on the cheek, once or twice a glancing kiss on the lips. I loved the anticipation. I always let Scully take the lead. Part of the charm (and the frustration) for me was trying to figure out her mood and what I could expect at the door. I was right about as often as I was wrong. Despite my resolve to let Scully set the pace, I don't know how long I would have let this go on before one night I just grabbed her and planted a big wet sloppy kiss on her, damn the consequences. As always, Scully took me by surprise. On the night in question, she didn't do anything overt. She just took my hand. This by itself was not unusual. We were standing at her door. She made no move to open it, and neither did I. I looked down and started to say something, and saw this look in her eyes I'd never seen before. I felt the soft pressure of her hand around my fingers -- just a gentle squeeze. And she smiled at me. Scully doesn't smile very much. It's not that she's humorless or unkind, she just doesn't bestow her smiles easily. Nothing about Dana Scully is easy, or simple, or trivial. The point I'm trying to make here, is that when Scully smiles, it means something. I saw everything in that smile. It must be why she doesn't do it very often; her smiles reveal too much. That smile spoke to me. It seemed to be saying, "What are you waiting for, Mulder?" She didn't say a word, just kept smiling up at me. She tilted her chin up, and she seemed to be leaning toward me a little. We were already standing pretty close together, and it didn't take much for me to bend down and meet that smile with one of my own, right against her lips. I'm not sure how long we stood there. I can see us now in my mind's eye. My mouth is pressed against hers, and our hands clutch each other's, and we stand there, swaying slightly as we kiss. Our only points of contact are our mouths and our hands. I was almost afraid to move, as much as I wanted to hold her. Scully broke the spell first. "Mulder," she said on a sigh, her head bent down. Then she looked up and smiled again. I felt her hand move up to my wrist and tug on it a little. "What?" I said in a similar tone. She'd moved a little closer, so that our bodies were almost touching. I felt mesmerized by her gaze and her touch. "You don't have to go, do you?" I shook my head slowly, my eyes never looking away from hers. I let her lead me back over to the couch. She helped me off with my jacket and hung it up again, and came back to sit next to me. I remember that we kissed for a long time. Sometimes they were soft, exploratory kisses; sometimes we were a little rougher. I found a couple of hickeys the next day when I was shaving. Seeing them made me smile with remembrance. I thought of Scully, making a similar discovery in her mirror. I know I gave as good as I got. That night, Scully took the lead; she's the one who eventually stood up and took my hand again. I was momentarily confused; I still wasn't sure if now that she'd had her way with me she was showing me the door. Once I realized where we were headed, I no longer hesitated. We stood next to the bed, and I did my best to undress her without letting my lips leave hers; she was doing the same thing for me, but eventually we had to stop to take a breath. I was almost afraid to do or say anything. I didn't want to break the spell. Scully put her hand on my naked flank and caressed me softly. "Are you okay, Mulder?" she asked softly. I nodded, my eyes on hers. She took my hand again and pulled me over to the bed. She lay down first, and I followed her. More kissing, and touching, and soft murmurs of encouragement and approval. I took my time with her, though my heart was about to burst out of my chest. By the time we finally joined, I was lucky to remember my name. Being with Scully was the culmination of years of yearning. Maybe I had a vague fear of the fantasy not living up to the actuality, but once I'd touched her and felt her soft, warm skin against my own, and her breath mingling with mine, I knew that the reality was beyond any dream I was capable of dreaming. Reality? Well, the reality is that it probably wasn't perfect, much as I'd like to remember that it was. We were a little awkward with each other, because no matter how often I'd imagined being together like this, I couldn't possibly have known what it would be like. But it was wonderful. Everything about it was wonderful, including the accidental elbow in my ribs, the bumped noses (both of us), even the high, girly giggle I think I emitted when Scully grabbed my waist and caught me on a ticklish spot. I wonder if Scully remembers it as vividly as I do. I'm not sure she does, but then she hasn't had as much time on her hands, and she probably wasn't making the kind of conscious effort I was to imprint the memory of that night. I'm not likely to forget it, though it's possible that I've embellished it a bit in my memory. I've had to live on that night, and the few others like it, for a long time. I've gotten a lot of mileage from my small store of memories of Scully and me together, so it's no wonder that sometimes I added a few grace notes here and there -- improving on perfection, in a way, because in reality I wouldn't have changed a thing. I can unspool it like a film now. It's my late-night entertainment. There are half a dozen or so more memories like it, but this one is my favorite. x-x-x-x Life goes on like this for some time. I stay in Portland, dividing my time between libraries and bookstores and cybercafes. I keep in touch with the Gunmen, though they have little to report to me. The question Langly had posed on the Xena list, having to do with properties of various metals, has garnered no response worth pursuing. We keep our contacts infrequent and minimal. I think about emailing Scully a lot, but don't do it. I continue to have nightmares. I think about going to Bellefleur, but don't do it. I'm a coward. I want Scully to be here, to wake me up when the nightmares get too bad, and then to tell me to get off my ass and get going. x-x-x-x As I mentioned before, the Gunmen have been helping me with various projects for some time. They've developed an amazing network of experts in various disciplines. They developed many of these contacts because of the answers I asked them to help me find over the years. I'm counting on their network to help me now. After Ruskin Dam, when I asked them to find out about Scully's chip, they leaped at the chance. I suspect, however, that they'd been trying to find answers for Scully since her abduction. These guys play their cards very close to their vests. I was around to see their first meeting, and if it's true that there are no coincidences, that was quite a fateful day for all of us. I couldn't be more grateful that they took a liking to me, G-Man or not, and that they became my friends, too. To be truthful, I'm a little jealous of them. They have each other to rely on, and they get to see Scully and William regularly. All I have is me. The lack of information from them is frustrating and it makes me restless. Not quite restless enough to move on, but definitely on edge. I've moved to a marginally nicer place on the outskirts of town, near the highway. I've requested an end unit and luckily for me, it's not a very popular place. When I wake up screaming, there's no one to be concerned. It's the third or fourth time I've moved since coming to Portland. It's not so much that I'm paranoid, but I don't want to get too comfortable in any one place, or cause undue notice by staying anywhere too long. The nightmares don't seem to be getting any worse, but they're not getting any better, either. I've bought an old car for the trip to the coast, though I continue to take the bus or walk around town. I keep my eyes peeled for anyone who seems too interested in my movements. Frankly, though, I don't think anyone is actively looking for me. They may think they've achieved their aim by distancing me from Scully. They want her as alone and vulnerable as they can get her. They don't know how strong her support system is, and that I'm the one who's floundering. x-x-x-x Out of the black silence, the lights flash on. This time it's different. I'm an observer; I see the blinding white light focusing on someone or something else. I hear the wail of a baby and I know who it is. I watch helplessly as I see the drill descend. I can't see him, but I know it's William. I try to move toward the light and find that I'm just as immobile as if I were still strapped in the chair. I can't let this happen. I've got to stop them. I struggle and twist and fight. Somehow I manage to move forward, smashing through whatever is restraining me. William's cries get louder and the drill gets closer. "NO! I hear myself shouting over and over again. The lights blink out and there's silence again. I'm standing outside my motel room door. It's freezing and it's drizzling as it has been all day. My arms ache. My throat hurts. I'm breathing like I've just run a marathon. The door next to mine opens very cautiously and I see a head peek out. "Did we wake you up?" I hear a man's voice, and from the open door I hear the screams of a very unhappy baby. "We just got here, and the baby just woke up. I'm really sorry." He looks scared. If I were him, I'd be scared, too. I know what I must look like. Several days growth of beard; shaggy, unkempt hair, and a wild look in my eyes. I have to clear my throat a little to be able to speak. I've hardly said a word to anyone in days. "It's okay," I say finally. "It's okay." "I'm sorry," the man says again, and he looks at me for a minute before closing the door again. I hear the murmur of voices and the baby's fretful cries. I turn to go back into my room and notice that I've splintered the frame. Evidently the door was the force field I fought against. No wonder the guy looked scared. I don't wait for morning; I clean myself up and pack my belongings. I'm not running away; I don't want anyone reporting me to the authorities. I stop at the office and check out, and tell them I had an "accident" with the door. I leave enough money to cover the repairs and add a bit extra for the night clerk. Ready or not, Bellefleur here I come. ===== end of Part Two; continued in Part Three. ===== Apart 3: Hope by ML Instead of heading straight for the scene of the crime, I go to the next town over. It's only a dozen miles down the road, but I hope there will be less chance of anyone recognizing me. I experience no anomalies, no loss of power, no missing time on the way there. The forest road looks familiar as I pass the turnoff to Bellefleur and head for the prosaically named Crab Cove. The trip here from Portland didn't take any time at all. Even though I stopped for a while at an all-night diner on the road just outside of Portland, it's nowhere near daylight yet. I find a rest stop and pull into it. Maybe I'll get a little sleep. I'm exhausted by my nightmares and the stress of going it alone. If I had a phone on me, I'd be calling Scully this minute, and probably make a fool of myself. Instead, I crawl into the back seat. It's almost like sleeping on my couch. I wrap my jacket around me and close my eyes. x-x-x-x After I check into a motel in Crab Cove, I get ready for a nice trip to the forest. I wonder if I should leave a note in the motel room in case I don't return. I don't have anything with me that could identify me as Fox Mulder. The Gunmen know my new identity -- changed from George Orr to James Burton when I arrived in Portland -- but how long would it take them to start looking for me? It occurs to me again that I ought to at least post a "no news is good news" type message on the list, just to let them know I'm still alive. They're probably hacking into hospital data bases even now. When I left, I wasn't too specific about my plans, just that I was going to check out a few leads and I'd be in touch. They knew Portland was my destination only because they'd had to send my new identification to me there. They've probably put two and two together by now, though. I delay leaving for Bellefleur just long enough to boot up the laptop and send a quick message to them. I don't bother to check email or read anything on the list. My resolve is already weak enough. I think again about sending a message to Scully but what would I say? I love you. I miss you. I want to come home. I don't think I could stop myself from typing it. I want to tell her about the work I'm doing, about the things I've found out, with the help of the Gunmen. But I don't dare do it. It's safer for her not to know what I'm working on. I don't like keeping Scully in the dark, but she has enough to worry about. She doesn't need to know the full extent of our plans until we can't keep her safe any other way. I will not put her in the position of being used as a target or a lure. I keep telling myself that this is the right thing to do, that the only way we can truly assess the danger is to find a way to tip their hand, and the best way to do that was for me to leave. Eventually, when nothing happens for a while, they're going to try and find a way to get me back. Well, I'm not going until I'm good and ready. x-x-x-x I drive slowly along the road until I come to the faded orange X. It's hard to believe it's still there. I look around on the pavement to see if there's any evidence of the toxic green blood that had eaten into the asphalt. I do see some pitting in the spot I think I recall, but I can't tell if it's just wear and tear or not. If Scully were here, she could take a sample and tell me. But it's not important. I'm just procrastinating. I leave the roadside and push my way into the woods. I find the clearing without too much trouble. It looks different, but not that different. I stand on the edge of the hollow, remembering. [...remembering Billy Miles holding Teresa Nemman as the unearthly wind circled them ... remembering Scully lying on the forest floor, and the fear I'd felt for her ... remembering Skinner's face as he helped me set the lasers to define the energy field...] Nothing beyond the beginning of my last night here, though. Nothing at all. I'm still standing outside the circle. The forest seems eerily silent: no birds, no rustle of underbrush. No strange hums or whooshing sounds. It seems utterly still. It's now or never. If I'm ever to help myself, I've got to do this. I step into the middle of the clearing. I stoop down and examine the dirt. I look all around. I put my hand out, half-expecting it to meet resistance. Nothing. Nothing at all. Not a tremor. I look up into the canopy of trees. I close my eyes. Still nothing. I spend the rest of the afternoon wandering around, checking my watch and my compass regularly for any signs of activity. As the light wanes, I've had enough. As I head back toward Crab Cove, I consider returning at night. The thought frightens me, which seems like a good reason to do it. I keep thinking about it all through a dinner I have no appetite for. I think about it in my room, idly channel surfing away. What good has it done me to come here? What good has it done me to leave Scully? All I've managed to do is to separate myself from the one thing, the one person, who seemed to do me some good. If I keep this up, They'll win. Eventually I get dressed in my warmest clothes and head back to the forest. It's definitely more familiar. I find the right spot by checking the odometer on the car. I have my flashlight and compass. Eventually I get out of the car. x-x-x-x This time I don't hesitate to walk into the middle of the clearing. I shine my flashlight all around. The forest doesn't seem as quiet as it did during the day; I think I can hear crickets or frogs or something chirping. The natural light is dim, but after I turn out my flashlight and let my eyes adjust, I can see the outlines of the trees and shrubs. No strange lights appear, no unnatural winds stir up. I sit on the ground and lean against a fallen tree. I look up as I did earlier in the day and I try to relax. I'm putting myself into a trance state; I haven't tried self-regression in years, but if ever I needed to, that time is now. I feel my body start to relax, and I try to make my brain do the same. I drift, only half aware of my surroundings. [...I look toward the circle of light. I see people, many of whom I recognize, just standing there. I'm vaguely aware of Skinner calling me, but it's like he's part of another life. I hear rustles and whispers and I realize that the people in the circle of light recognize me and are beckoning me forward. I step into the circle and am greeted on all sides. Some reach out and pat my arm. They seem glad to see me, though I can't think why. They think I'm here to help them, to save them, though I know I'm as helpless to resist as they are. [...Their attention suddenly turns away from me, to something on the edge of the circle. Another newcomer? Only in a sense. It's the man I know as the Alien Bounty Hunter. He acknowledges my presence, and I feel a thrill of fear and understanding. I'm the one he came for. I'm the one he lured back to Bellefleur. [...I feel a change in the light, a pulsing. I look up. I sense everyone else doing the same. In less time than I can say it, we are pulled up into the ship. [...I think of Scully as I leave my life behind.] x-x-x-x I don't know how long I've been lying in the clearing when I come to. I'm freezing and a little damp, though lucky for me it hasn't rained yet. I think I see the beginnings of sunrise. I feel exhausted in mind and body, but not afraid. I'm almost too tired to drive back to Crab Cove, but instead of going directly to my motel, I stop at the cafe. I want warmth, and light, and conversation around me, even if I'm not taking part in it. Even copious amounts of coffee can't keep me from almost pitching forward into my breakfast. When I get back to the motel, I fall into bed without even taking off my shoes. I sleep without dreams. I don't kid myself that I'm suddenly cured; I've barely started but I feel heartened by the breakthrough. The forest no longer holds any fear for me. It's the catalyst I needed. I'm beginning to understand the how, and I hope that I might figure out the why, too. x-x-x-x For a week, I spend every night in the forest. Every night I remember a little more. [...We all stand in a group. I have no sense of motion but I know that we are on board a craft. No one speaks but I can hear thoughts, just as I could before. They're jumbled and diffuse. Someone thinks of her baby; someone else wonders how long it will be this time. I hear repeated prayers, curses, and feel the blankness of paralyzing fear. Some seem to know, as I do, that there will be no return this time.] When I wake up the second morning, I have tears on my cheeks. I fear for what's become of the people I was with on the ship. Were all of them left for dead, as I was? Will we encounter them in the same form as Billy Miles? x-x-x-x [...There is a blank time, and I wake up in some kind of restraining device. I feel uncomfortable and try to shift my position and that's when I feel the excruciating pain in my joints -- something like large needles or wires somehow holding me in place. I can't see; my head is restrained. I can feel some sort of device pulling out the skin of my cheeks; another is holding my face steady. I can't see any of my body but I can tell I'm naked. The light above me is intense but not hot.] I wake up with a throat hoarse from screaming. I wonder if like the tree falling in the uninhabited forest, did I really make a sound? If this land is still private property, the current sheriff doesn't seem to care. I've gotten the distinct impression from the good people of Crab Cove that this is a place to avoid at all costs. Even if the mass abduction didn't get much press, it seems to have had an impact on the locals. When I go to the cafe, I hear stories that tourists might disbelieve, unless they're particularly gullible. I do know the truth, and though I feign only polite interest, I know that it's not all made up. Maybe they're so open with me because I look like "just folks" to them. If I'd come in wearing a suit and flashing a badge, they'd probably never have said a word. x-x-x-x [...I can feel Scully. Her thoughts are all over the place; I can't focus on her very well. She's angry, and afraid, and somehow, also happy about something. Whatever it is, it's buried deep inside her, and I can't quite make out what it is. [...How is it that I can feel her, but I can't make her feel me? I have no sense that this is a two-way connection. [...I'm glad she can't feel me. I can't reassure her; I'm fucking petrified. All I want to do is scream save me save me save me, over and over again. [...The lights pin me down, the drills approach, and all I can do is scream for Scully.] I'm starting to feel the effects of spending every night in the forest. Physically I'm run down and achy, and I probably have a slight fever. Mentally, however, with each memory recovered I feel stronger, more in control. I'm almost there. I've stopped having the nightmares, except in the forest. x-x-x-x [...I no longer have any sense of time. There is blankness, and awareness. Awareness is when the testing happens. For all I know They also test when I'm not conscious, but I'm not really thinking any more. All my waking time is filled with testing, and pain. There is no other reality. The past is a dream, something that happened to someone else. [...I still remember Scully, though I haven't felt her presence for a long time. She is the only thing that seems real outside of this circle of light and pain. I know that if I lose the memory of her, it will be the end of me.] [...there is nothing beyond this circle, They tell me. The end time has come.] I have to stop. I wake up shivering violently, chilled beyond the bone, chilled to my soul. I know without question that not long after this, the ship started jettisoning the "dead" bodies. And that I was one of them. x-x-x-x That morning, I come back to my room and strip down for a hot shower. For the first time since leaving the hospital, I examine my body. There are no longer any scars from the procedures. If it weren't for my memories, I'd disbelieve anything ever happened to me. I look carefully at my wrists, my ankles, my chest. I haven't shaved for a while, but I know the marks on my cheeks healed fastest of all. Even the scarring on the roof of my mouth is healed completely. Even my poor violated brain was repaired. I paid a high price for the "cure." I guess I could say I'm grateful for that, though it wasn't intentional, I'm sure. It was just luck that Scully stopped the incubation but that the healing process was already in place. I do however, miss some other scars that somehow healed as well: the scar on my inner thigh, the first serious injury I suffered with Scully as my partner, marking the first of many bedside visits. The scar on my shoulder, where Scully shot me. The one in my temple, a reminder of a much more reckless way I once tried to recover memories. Strange souvenirs of a mis-spent life. Or would have been mis-spent, if not for Scully. I wonder now if I'm "more human than human" as William is supposed to be. If I have no human frailties, what does that mean? I feel pretty human most of the time, with the same regrets, and anger, and fears, that I've always had. And love, which I never expected, but for which I'm grateful. I'm almost ready to leave Bellefleur behind, literally and figuratively. No more nights in the forest. I think I've discovered all I'm going to here. x-x-x-x I have to drive through Idaho to get to Montana, and I take a little detour to Ellens to see what I can see there. I've had a thought that perhaps Colonel Budahas and some of his fellow pilots might have been in something like the super soldier program. Ellens is deserted when I get there. It looks like April Base; the residential area is fenced off with warning signs. Interestingly enough, the fence surrounding the infamous Yellow Base area is in disrepair. Many of the lights on the top of the fence look like they've been shot out or knocked down by rocks. The cafe in town is closed; even though there are still residents, the whole town looks abandoned. I don't hear any jets taking off or landing, either. I stop in at the motel where Scully and I stayed. It wasn't the Ritz when we stayed there, but it's gotten very seedy. The parking lot is filled with potholes, and there are only a few trucks there. The pimply, pierced young man behind the counter barely looks up as I come in. "Hourly or overnight?" he asks in a bored tone. "I'm not staying," I say, though I've just this minute decided that. "What happened to the air base?" "Closed maybe five, six years ago. Took half the fuckin' town with it," he picks idly at a scab on his arm. I try not to shudder. I thank him, not that he notices, and get out of there. I flirt with the idea of making a nostalgic trip back to Yellow Base, on the off chance that something interesting has been left behind, but think better of it. I've been trying to recover my memories, not have them wiped again. x-x-x-x I have a lot to think about on the drive to Helena. I'm not sure what the base closure means, but I'll have to look into it. I wonder if it closed because we got too close to the truth there? I remember Deep Throat telling me that I'd seen things I wasn't meant to see. It wouldn't be the first mop-up operation accelerated by something I discovered. It's long past sundown on the second day driving when I reach Helena, Montana. After the visit to Ellens Air Base, I spent the night in Boise. I've driven straight through since then, fueled by coffee and food at the truck stops along the way. It's been me, the big rig drivers, and a few other pickups on the road, and no one else. I think I blend right in. I've kept my beard, though I've trimmed it a little. My hair brushes the collar of my flannel shirt. I wear old jeans and scuffed up boots, and an old denim jacket, lined with fleece. I thought about getting a cowboy hat, but didn't want to look too conspicuous. I'm driving an old pickup. I look for a particular motel near St. Jean's Hospital; the one where Scully stayed last year. It's a small place, one of many within a few blocks of the hospital. "We don't get much business here this time of year," the desk clerk remarks as I sign the registration card. "During the summer and fall, now that's another story. Though we were full up for a couple of weeks `bout this time last year." "Something special happening then?" I ask, carefully showing only a passing interest. "It was the F-B-I." the clerk says, leaning forward like a conspirator. "They found one a them cults up in the hills. They was torturing people. Found a whole big graveyard up there." "Really." I've hit pay dirt. The motel clerk is also the town gossip, though perhaps not the most reliable source for accurate information. "Where was this place?" "Up north of town a ways. I can draw you a map, if you want." "Is anyone still there?" I ask. "Nope. FBI rounded most everyone up. There was a night raid. Shoulda seen the lights and noise they made! It was like the Second Coming." I bite back the remark I might have made if Scully had been standing there with me and thank him. He gives me my room key and I promise to stop by in the morning for directions to the compound. Right now, all I want is to sleep. I hope that will be possible. It occurs to me that I could be staying in the very room that Scully had. I really have no idea which room was hers, but I stop just inside the door to see if I feel any "vibe" left from her presence. Nothing, of course. Any psychic connection I have with Scully seems to work only when I'm in her vicinity. Even when my brain was being affected by the artifact, I couldn't sense her from too far away. I close my eyes and think of her anyway. Scully, if you can hear me, I'm thinking of you, and William. I hope you're okay. I hope you're safe. I realize that I haven't gotten in touch with the Gunmen since I got to Bellefleur. I tell myself I should probably send a message just letting them know I'm okay. I'll do it in the morning; I'm too tired to think right now. x-x-x-x [...Wherever I am, it's dark. I wait. I'm not sure what I'm waiting for, or where I am. I feel drawn here by some force I can't explain. I hear movement, someone approaching. [...I know it's Scully. I can feel her thoughts. She's tired, and worn down by grief and fear. The grief is for someone else, but the fear is for me. [...Suddenly I see her in front of me. Her face is drawn and tired. I've never seen her look this way, even when she was ill and dying. She seems to have lost all hope. I want so much to reach out to her. I can't. I have to content myself with thinking to her, [...She doesn't see me at first. She seems puzzled, then though I haven't moved or spoken, she is suddenly aware of my presence. [...I see so many thoughts and feelings cross her face in one breath. Surprise, and a swell of happiness, gone as quickly as it appears. Questions tremble on her lips. The fear returns, and with it, grief. [...This time, it's grief for me. I think I hear her say my name, though maybe it's only in her head that I hear it. [...Something makes her turn, and it's the last thing I know for a very long time.] ...I lie awake, trembling in my bed. I've never felt so alone. I know what I've remembered. My dying moments. x-x-x-x The compound is deserted. There are still tatters of crime scene tape here and there, flashes of yellow in an otherwise gray landscape. I roam around the buildings, trying to get a sense of what it must have been like a year ago. I have no memory at all of anything that happened. From what I've read, I was already dead when my body was dropped off here. I stand in the middle of the largest building. At one time it was partitioned off by opaque plastic sheets. I can see metal brackets in the corners that must have held the cameras. My eyes close and I imagine myself here. The report said that Absalom insisted he brought my body here to try and help me. There was another man, one Scully identified as Jeremiah Smith, who was doing the actual "helping." Absalom was taken into custody, but it was assumed that Jeremiah was re-taken when the abductees were. Scully's eye witness report, corroborated in part by others, described a bright white light, big enough to illuminate this building, and vibrations not unlike an earthquake. When the light disappeared, all the residents of the compound were gone too. She didn't actually mention the alien ship, but I know it was here, and I suspect she knew it, too. I feel nothing here now. Except for my vision last night, there is nothing for me to re-live. I was dead. I'm about to leave the building when I catch a movement outside out of the corner of my eye. Automatically, my hand goes for my gun, which of course isn't there. I walk slowly to the door. "Who's there?" I call. "I'm unarmed, I won't hurt you." The possibility exists that it's a cult member or even one of the abductees that somehow escaped everyone's notice. That's my hope, anyway. If it's the alien bounty hunter, or a super soldier, I'm out of luck. I stand in the doorway, waiting. Eventually, the figure I saw comes out of hiding. I'm not really surprised to see who it is. I knew eventually we'd meet up again. "What are you doing here?" I ask. "I might ask the same of you, Agent Mulder," he says. "Just Mulder," I tell him. "I'm not with the FBI any more." "And Agent Scully?" he asks. "Is she here?" I shake my head. "She's back in DC Look, I'm really not comfortable making small talk out here in the open. Can we at least go inside?" Jeremiah Smith shakes his head. "Come with me." He leads the way past the buildings where his truck is parked. He motions for me to get in and we drive through the gathering dusk. Eventually, we arrive at a small cabin tucked into a notch in the hills, well hidden from the road. "It's an old miner's cabin," Jeremiah explains. "The hills are riddled with them. It's where I came, after." "Have you been here ever since?" I ask. The place looks deserted, even on the inside. There's a sleeping bag on the pallet in the corner, and a pot-bellied stove throws off a little heat. A couple of wooden crates pass for table and chairs. "No. I move around. I go where the abductees are being returned. Though there aren't as many now." "Do you -- " I swallow, finding it hard to ask the question. "Do you help them?" "I try. I can't get to all of them. And I may be the only one left who *can* help them. Now, tell me. Why are you here?" "I still need answers," I say. "I need to understand what happened to me, and to keep it from happening to anyone else." Jeremiah shakes his head. "It may be too late for that, though maybe not too late to stop them." "I need to know what you know," I say. "I need you to help me understand." "Make yourself comfortable, then," Jeremiah says. "It's going to take a while." We sit. Jeremiah stokes up the fire. "I can save you some time," I say. "Let's assume I know this much: that there is a shadow government that's been conducting experiments for years, using alien technology and DNA to create some sort of super soldier. That this government has also been involved in ongoing plans to help an alien race to colonize Earth. That somehow," I have to pause and pick my words carefully, "they have been successful in this, and that now these beings, super soldiers, genetic hybrids, clones, whatever you care to call them, are on the loose. To what final end, I can guess. But how do I -- and those I care about -- figure into all this?" "None of the names you give these beings really fits them," Jeremiah says. "I suppose `hybrid' comes as close to it as your language can convey. They are a hybrid of human, and organic material, and alien technology. It started as a cooperative effort between species, in the aftermath of your World War II. Just as other unconventional weapons began to proliferate, it was thought that having the ultimate `human' weapon could somehow prevent annihilation of the world. "However, some awoke to the reality of the situation sooner than others. The true nature of the project and its reach became very clear as the authors of it were required to give up members of their families as insurance of their cooperation." I remember Kurtzweil's words about my father: "His disenchantment outlasted mine." Perhaps that was why... I hadn't spoken aloud, but Jeremiah nods. "What you left out of your synopsis is that, as is true for any group, there are dissidents. There are those who disagree with the program, or with the intended outcome. Some work within the system to subvert it. You already know about the rebel forces. You should also know that not all of these - super soldiers, for want of a better term - are interested in the same outcome. And that they can be subverted, even destroyed." He certainly has all my attention now. "How can they be destroyed?" "I've already made that information available to your friends in Washington. You should check your email more often." "Why now?" I ask. "The last time we met, you weren't willing to tell me so much." "You weren't ready," Jeremiah says. "You were only concerned with your sister. You paid lip service to the discovery of the greater conspiracy, but only so far as it intersected with your interests. And your interests were concentrated on your sister, and later, on Agent Scully." "I guess you know I found my sister, or at least I know what happened to her," I tell him. "What makes you think I'm interested in any of this any more? That I don't just want to be left alone?" Jeremiah looks at me for a long time, saying nothing. He has that look in his eyes that I've seen before. It's as if he thinks I'm being particularly dense on purpose. "You still have Agent Scully," he says finally. Then he adds, "And you're a father now." I hadn't told him. I don't bother to ask how he knows. I merely nod. He's right, and there's no point in denying it. "You already know something of the larger implications of your son's birth," Jeremiah continues. "Are you ready to face them?" "I'm ready to do what it takes to keep him safe," I say. He nods. "Then I have more to say to you. "Your human physiology isn't like the aliens, even those within human form. They've been testing the limits of the human frame and internal structure for years. There are some advantages that the aliens have always intended to adapt for colonization. "So, as your race has been trying to perfect an alien/human hybrid, the aliens have been doing the same thing. What you thought was a clean-up operation was simply the next phase in the process. They were gathering up subjects to introduce a new type of recombinant viral strain, which would eventually replace the weakest human components and create the new race." "That means the bodies weren't being left for dead by the aliens, they were planted --" "-- and if left to themselves, would have incubated the new life form, regardless. Putting Billy Miles on life support merely accelerated a process that was inevitable." I can't help but shudder at my intended fate. The nightmares were real. I might have been a super soldier myself, if Scully hadn't saved me. x-x-x-x The sun is coming up when Jeremiah finishes his tale. Of course, there have been plenty of interruptions by yours truly, trying to understand what he's talking about. "How can we tell a good `un from a bad `un?" I'm being a little facetious, as fatigue begins to make me feel a little disoriented. I'm pretty sure I already know the answer. "There's nothing that marks one as `good' or `bad,'" Jeremiah says. "Their imperative might change under certain influences. Not all of this is known yet. It will be up to you to find out." That's nothing new. "Kind of hard to tell the sides without a score card," I mutter, but get no reaction from Jeremiah. I think of Arthur Dales' story of the gray who wanted to be human so he could laugh. "So it's back to `trust no one' again, huh?" "That should be familiar terrain for you, Mr. Mulder." That it is. But I have one more question to ask. "I still need to know. How does my son figure into all this? Is he -- is he something other than human?" Jeremiah shakes his head. "The baby is very human, but he has some special abilities that will become clear as time goes on. I don't need to tell you that your baby was -- unexpected. I don't think anyone anticipated this. They certainly didn't anticipate your alliance with Agent Scully." Score one for us, I think, and I see that once again Jeremiah has "heard" me. His lips curl in a slight smile. "So what do we do now?" I ask. "What you've been trying to do. Keep your family safe. Continue to look for the answers. Know that there are others like you, who are doing the same." "Where?" "It may be better not to know. Learn something from the recent tragic events in your country. Allow them to operate independently, in small cells. Meet only when necessary, communicate sporadically. Your friends understand this." I can almost sense admiration in his tone. The Gunmen's stock shoots up a little higher. "It sounds like a lonely life." I imagine spending the rest of my life without Scully. Nothing would be worth it. "It can be." I see a pensive look cross Jeremiah's face for a second. "But you needn't be solitary. Just don't try to find out where these people are. It's safer for them, and for you. If you know, They can find out. The time will come when you will come together. You will know when." x-x-x-x I'm beginning to feel hopeful for the first time since my return. What's more, I've got something to go on now. Before I left him, I tried to persuade Jeremiah Smith to come with me, but he wouldn't do it. "It's much too dangerous," he said. "I'll know how to find you if I need to." "Where do you go from here?" I asked him. He shrugged. "Where I'm needed," he said. "But you might meet up with me in Minnesota, one of these days," he said. I wasn't sure what he meant by that, and knew better than to ask him. He'd given me enough information for now. The first thing I do when I get back to the motel is check my email. The first one is dated a few days back. --- To: geobounce13 From: leerjet01 subj: magnetic personalities geo, read this article, then check out the USGS website, esp. the part about iron ore. coordinates for a location you need to follow... --- The next one has yesterday's date: --- To: geobounce13 From: leerjet01 subj: our quarry don't you read your mail anymore? here's the other part: --- He lists a URL to go to, and what looks like longitude and latitude. Apparently the clue to this is contained in the article Frohike sent me. I send a brief reply to him, then read the article. The article has a lot of information about the magnetic properties of some types of iron ore, and atmospheric effects, among other things. After reading the information about iron ore, I know what Frohike is bringing to my attention. I go to the website for the next clue in the trail. Tucked down in the corner of the page about iron ore is a small icon I recognize. I don't think it's normally a part of the USGS site. When I click on it, it disappears, but a small video window comes up. The quality is pretty bad, but I watch what appears to be an experiment with natural magnetic fields. There's no sound, but there's no mistaking the explosion that takes place. I don't know where the Gunmen got this, but I suspect that this is what Jeremiah Smith was talking about. Something in the iron ore in certain quarries holds a clue to fighting the super soldiers. We've got to find a way to lure one of them out into the open. What is the best bait to use? Me, of course. I spend the rest of the day figuring out the best way to go about this. It can't be too obvious that I'm coming home to do battle; just about the only thing on our side right now is surprise. I realize this is a huge gamble. I've got to involve Scully in this, too, without tipping my hand to the bad guys. It's going to take a very subtle hand, but I'm going to write to Scully. I'm going to have to write in such a way that she knows what I tell her is sincere, and that I want her to tell me to come home. After a good deal of thought, I sit down to compose the email of my life. I have the general idea in my head, but I want to add a little something to it. I want it to be more than just a coded message. Subject line: "Dearest Dana." I did ask Scully once if I could call her "Dana." I think I took her by surprise. I even offered to let her call me "Fox," but thank God she didn't take me up on it. I've seldom used her first name. I started by calling her "Agent Scully" or "Doctor Scully," and eventually, just "Scully." I liked the way it sounded, and I thought it helped me keep a certain professional distance. Trouble is, her last name became very special to me, in a way her first name never could have. I have never gotten used to calling her by her first name. I mostly use it when I'm talking to her mom. I've also used it once in a great while when Scully and I were alone together. One advantage is that using "Dana" really gets Scully's attention. It's become a sort of flag. My use of "Dearest Dana" in the subject line was not only likely to get her attention, but the attention of any watchers, too. "Dearest Dana, "I've resisted contacting you for reasons I know you continue to appreciate. But, to be honest, some unexpected dimensions of my new life are eating away at any resolve I have left. I'm lonely, Dana, uncertain of my ability to live like this. I want to come home. To you and to William." I wonder if it's a little too over the top. I mean every word of it, but I'm aware that someone besides its intended recipient will read it too, and will they think so, too? Every word in that email is true. Missing Scully and William has weakened my resolve to stay away from them. I know that Scully will see the truth behind those words. I also know that she will see it for what it is. A signal. It's the phrase "unexpected dimensions" that will tip her off. That's our code. A call to arms, if you will. It means I've discovered something. The rest of the email could say anything at all, we agreed. I take a deep breath and hit the "send" button. I'll be getting my summons soon. And, with any luck, we'll have a practical demonstration of the data that Jeremiah Smith gave us. Until we know its effectiveness, we won't be able to put Phase Two into effect. Phase Two is the part that I most care about. Phase Two is me getting my family back. ===== end of Part Three; continued in Part Four ===== Apart 4: Fear by ML Scully's reply shows up the very next day. "I'm physically shaking right now seeing your words..." Oh, Scully. What you've just done to me with those words... "...wishing it were you speaking them to me..." Even though I'm sure she's laying it on thick for the watchers, that's quite an admission for Scully to make. It warms me and frightens me in equal parts. She's so vulnerable where she is. I know she's brave, and I know she's capable, but I wish she didn't have to go through this alone. "...I want so badly to see you, too..." Scully, if it's half as much as I want to see you, we could light up DC with our need... "...but you are still not safe here..." That's going to change, and soon. x-x-x-x It takes a couple of days to work out the details, but the whole time, I'm on the road, heading back toward DC. Scully's initial email is non-committal, but I know that in a day or so I'll be getting the one I'm expecting. I've already been in touch with the Gunmen. They've been doing a little monitoring themselves. They've told me what Doggett told Scully, and what he's found out so far. When Scully's next email comes, I'm ready. x-x-x-x It's like watching a train wreck, I think as I see the action unfold like a silent movie. I see Scully's head turn, her mouth open and her eyes wide as she sees the train barely slow on its way through the station. Exactly like a train wreck. If Scully had been standing next to me, I would have said something like that to her, making a joke at my own expense. What else can I do? Right now, I have to deal with the sudden change in plans. I'd intended to meet Scully, and work out a meeting with the mystery man. I should have known that he would make his own plans. I already have my suspicions about *what* he is. This seems to confirm it. The conductor's voice over the PA breaks into my thoughts. "Ladies and gentlemen, we're sorry for the change in plans. We'll be making an unscheduled stop for a few minutes, but we should arrive at our next stop close to on time. For those who expected to detrain at the last stop, we will have a chartered bus standing by to get you back to the station." I find the car attendant. "Can you tell me why we didn't stop?" He shakes his head. I expected this. What's he going to tell me, there's been a shooting? Besides, I've had my face glued to the window for several miles now. As we neared the station, I could make out some of what happened. I saw the man leap, and I felt the thump of impact. I saw a man go down on the platform. "Was that your stop?" The attendant asks. I nod. "I'm sorry, but we'll get you back there as soon as possible. The station master'll let anyone waiting know." "Where are we right now?" I ask. "And why are we stopping?" "We have to let a freight train go by, and there's a siding here at the quarry." The attendant gives me an impersonal smile and starts to walk away. "Excuse me, do you mean Manville Quarry?" "Yes, sir. Should be coming up on your right, but I don't think you can see much this time of night." He smiles again, and goes about his business. It's a risk, asking him about the quarry, but now I see my luck hasn't entirely deserted me. If the mystery man was at the station, he knows I'm on this train. If I get off, he'll follow me. x-x-x-x It's a damn party out here. I hear a familiar voice as I run through the quarry, looking for the man I now know to be a super soldier. My plan, such as it is, is to lure him into the quarry, and see if what I've seen and read is really true. If it isn't, I'm probably screwed. If Doggett is here, I'm sure Scully can't be far away, either. No way would she let him come alone. There's a woman standing next to him, but she's too tall. Agent Reyes, probably. And then, I hear Scully. "Mulder?" She calls again, desperation edging her voice. It's all I can do to keep from running to her. But at that moment, my attention is caught by someone else. Heading not for me, but for Scully. I've already stepped out of my hiding place, ready to lure him away from her. I'm far enough away that I can hear her voice but not the words, or the man's low reply. He takes a few steps closer. Scully is shouting at him, but he continues to advance. My muscles tense, ready to leap into the open and distract him from Scully. Then, it happens. He starts to shake, and his skin looks like it's burning from the inside out. He practically flies into Scully, knocking her down as he is pulled by an unseen force. He explodes against a seam of reddish rock in the quarry wall. Exactly like iron filings to a magnet. I see Scully running away from me, into the mist. I do not follow her. x-x-x-x "How you doin', man?" I look up from my drink, and realize that I'm not hearing things; it really is Frohike. He arranged to meet me in this seedy bar. I've been sitting here for an hour, replaying the sound of Scully's voice in my head, and the brief look I had of her. "Been better," I say. I've had years of practice schooling my face, but Frohike knows me very well. He pats my shoulder awkwardly. "Everyone's okay. I heard the thing went the way we thought." I nod. "Yeah, well, we know a little more than we did before. But we don't know enough." I don't want to face this, but I have to. "I can't come home yet, can I?' Frohike shakes his head. "But you're gonna have some company soon." I'm already disagreeing. "I can't ask Scully to leave now. I'm not settled anywhere, I have nothing to offer her, and besides --" "Give me a minute, man. *We* have a plan." Frohike grins a little. "You know that little bit of research you asked us to do? That little bit of technology you needed? Well," Frohike really grins now, "we got it." I know what he's talking about. A chip. *The* chip. "Please tell me you're not kidding," I say. "I'm not, I swear on Langly's mom's grave." "She's not dead." "Exactly." Frohike signals for a beer. "We'll tell Scully about it, and let her decide when. But we've gotta go soon." This is the first I've heard that the Gunmen plan to leave, too. I should have realized it long before, but I guess I was more focused on my own plans than theirs. Frohike explains that they've been making plans all along, same as me. "We have a place just outside St. Paul," he says. "We've had it for a while, and we think it could make a nice base of operations. And you're welcome, of course, as is Scully. In fact, we think it's probably the best place to go. Especially since we've discovered that some of the land nearby has some special qualities." "What is it, a giant economy sized warehouse?" I ask, deadpan. "No, it's a software company. It's been our hobby for a while. Had to do something with the money from FPS." "And I thought you invested it all in that film company." "Go ahead and laugh, Mulder, but that's been a money-maker, too." "Yeah, I guess porn films never go out of style. I just didn't think you could stand being a silent partner." "They're `erotic art films,' man. Mulder, if you don't knock it off..." "Okay, okay," I concede. It's been so long since I've talked to a friend. I'm enjoying this, despite the seriousness of the situation. "Aren't you going to ask about the special features of the land there?" Frohike says. I give him a grin of my own and recite, "It's located in the middle of the largest source of naturally occurring iron ore in the United States." Frohike gives me a high-five. "And I thought you were just another pretty face." "What, you thought I didn't read all that crap you sent me?" Our meeting is over too soon. Frohike promises to keep in touch. "Usual channels," he says. "Might be best to communicate to Scully through us, too." I shake my head. "They may think I'm dead now, but I should avoid getting in touch with her anyway. I don't want to put her in any more danger." Frohike nods. "We'll keep an eye on her, and let you know what the plan is. Where are you going?" "I still have some things to check out," I say. "Let me know when you're on the move. And what Scully decides." x-x-x-x Not even a month later, I get word. The Gunmen have left DC. I think that means Scully has said yes to their plan, though they don't actually say that. I haven't tried to get in touch with Scully. In a weak moment, I checked my "trust_no1" account and found the message she sent to me right after the quarry incident. My hand hovered over the reply key for quite a while, but in the end, I didn't do it. I've been in Arizona for a while. It's the last place on the Fox Mulder Abduction Tour that I have to check out. Scully said she "felt" me here. Doggett said he saw me, though Scully and Skinner both knew the impostor for what he was. I check out the school where Gibson Praise hid out. Or rather, what used to be the school. It looks like it burned down in the not too distant past. Scully says Gibson is somewhere safe, but I wonder. They seem to find a way to get to everyone else; what chance does a young boy have? Even one with the special gifts that Gibson has. I worry that whether he's "special" or not, that William will be condemned to the kind of life Gibson has. Never feeling safe, never able to experience the things a normal kid takes for granted. I'll do my best to keep that from happening. I wonder again if my father made the same vow; that maybe he never intended that either Samantha or I would be touched by what he did. In any event, there's nothing left to find or to feel here. I seem to have worked through the worst of my abduction issues, at least for now. I don't sleep any better at night, but at least I'm not dreaming of drills and waking up screaming. I wonder how soon I can expect to hear that Scully is on her way. x-x-x-x Another month passes. I've been checking out old meteor crash sites both in person and over the Internet. I'm interested in the mineral composition as well as the places they crashed. I've got quite a database now. I'm in Manson, Iowa, when I get an email telling me that Scully has left DC for parts unknown. That's my signal to start heading for Minnesota. I take my time, wandering around the Midwest, checking out different places I've read about: old abduction sites, places where people were returned, other phenomena that might be significant. I even pay a visit to Lake Okobogee while I'm in Iowa. Frohike told me that it might be awhile before they can bring Scully and William in; they have to test the viability of their countermeasures before they even tell her where her ultimate destination is. I wasn't very happy to hear that, but even I had to see the sense in it. All I want is to know that Scully and William are safe. Frohike had urged me to make my own arrival as quickly as possible. "You've been safe out there so far, but I wouldn't tempt fate, if you know what I mean," he said. "I don't want to be the one to explain to Scully that you've gone missing again." I just don't want to be cooped up somewhere, waiting for her. I'd rather be out, doing what I can to find answers. Every day, as arranged, I make the rounds of the lists to see if there's an update on Scully's whereabouts. The operative word is "homecoming." I'm not far from St. Paul when I see the word I've been waiting for, and I don't waste any time. Frohike has arranged to meet me in Minneapolis, rather than give me directions to their new place. Paranoid to the last, I think. No one has followed me; of that I'm certain. I have no tracking chips, either. I guess the watchers figure that they'll never have to keep tabs on me as long as they know where Scully is. I smile as I see Frohike waiting outside the Metrodome. I'm hoping that he might even have them with him. He's standing by himself, but that doesn't mean they aren't in the car. He looks different. His hair is trimmed, and he's clean-shaven. He's almost respectable looking. Not quite like Byers, but you wouldn't look at him funny. I probably look like a hobo in comparison. My smile fades as he doesn't return it. I feel my gut tighten. Something is wrong. "Spill it," I say without preamble. "What's going on?" "We've lost Scully," Frohike says reluctantly. It's all I can do not to lose it. "You WHAT?" I can't help but shout. "Easy, Mulder, don't make it worse than it is. Let's get going and I'll fill you in on the details." He leads the way to a van that's a cut above their old Volkswagen. Not new, but plain and unobtrusive. Once we're in, I demand, "How could you lose them? What the hell happened?" "We're still trying to figure it out, Mulder," Frohike says. "One minute she was there, fast asleep in her apartment with William, and the next minute she was gone." My gut is really painful now. "Were they -- were they --" "Taken? Not by aliens, if that's what you mean. And whoever did it used her car." "Where was she?" "In Des Moines, for the past month or so. We had a friend keeping an eye on her." I can hardly believe it; I spent all that time in Iowa and never once visited Des Moines. Oh, life's little ironies. "Your friend did a great job, didn't he?" I snap. "What'd he do? Stalk her? Scare her away? Or just watch her get snatched under his nose?" "For your information, Mulder, *she* made sure that Scully never knew who she was. She's good at disguises. She hardly took her attention away, day or night. Whatever happened took place in a very short window of time." "Do you mean she was being surveiled?" I'm really pissed at this, almost as much as I'm pissed at the fact that she's gone missing. "You guys were *watching* her? The whole time?" Frohike nods reluctantly. "Not inside her place, only doors and windows. I'm sure Scully understands." "Well, you can explain it to her when we find her." I won't allow for any other possibility. We will find her. *I* will find her. x-x-x-x When we pull up to the outside gate of Lodestone, Inc., I'm impressed in spite of myself. It looks like a legitimate business, very upscale by the Gunmen's usual standards. Frohike had told me it was a software company, but I figured it was some little mail order operation somewhere in the warehouse district. Instead, it's in the greenbelt corporate park area of St. Paul. Talk about hiding in plain sight. We drive around to the loading dock area and Langly and Byers are waiting for us. "You told him," Langly says as we get out. Frohike nods. "And you're still standing, Dude." "Give me the keys, Frohike," I say. "I'm going to Des Moines, right now." Mulder, it's at least six hours away," Frohike protests. "What the hell does that matter?" I say. "We're wasting time here." Byers looks uncomfortable. "I think you should stay here, Mulder," he says. "It's not safe." "I've been traipsing all over the countryside for the past six months, guys. I *think* I can handle this." "Scully wouldn't like it." They tried to pull this before. I didn't buy it then, and I'm not buying it now. "That's a low blow and you know it. I *need* to go. If you want a reason, then how about I'm a trained investigator? I might find some clues you guys and your `friend' overlooked." I give them all my best Skinner-like steely stare. "We're wasting time," I say again. In the end, Frohike agrees to take me along while Byers and Langly keep the home fires burning. Frohike lets me share the driving duties. I have a lot of time to think on the way to Des Moines, and none of the conclusions I come to are good ones. Maybe they've been watching us all along, just waiting for one of us to blow our cover, and lead them to us. It's a very real possibility, and one I know isn't lost on the guys. Though I'm still worried, the initial anger has passed. I knew, as did Scully, that there were risks inherent in this whole undertaking. The Gunmen did what they could to ensure success; it's not their fault if it got all fucked up. By the time we reach the outskirts of Des Moines, I've convinced myself that it's actually my fault. I wanted Scully to leave DC. I needed her. If it hadn't been for my selfishness, she'd probably still be okay. x-x-x-x It's early evening when we get to Scully's apartment. Frohike already has a plan worked out. He goes to the manager's office and introduces himself as Scully's brother. He explains she was called out of town on a family emergency and makes sure her rent is paid up through the end of the month. He's come to pick up a few things for her, he says, and he'll be in touch if she's not coming back right away. I've been waiting in the van and he signals for me to come with him to the apartment. As we get to Scully's door, her neighbor's door opens. "Oh hi, Carol," Frohike says casually. "James, this is Carol." He winks at me. This must be his friend. She's a knockout, even in old sweats and a big shirt. She has dark hair and pouty lips. She looks a bit like a porn actress I used to like. I hate her on sight. She sticks her hand out to shake mine and I reluctantly take it. "I'm sorry we're meeting under such unpleasant circumstances," she says, in a voice that reminds me unpleasantly of Phoebe Green. Another strike against her. I mutter something in reply and move past her into Scully's apartment. I inspect the handle and the lock. There are no signs of forced entry. "Have you guys been through here already?" I ask. Frohike shakes his head. "Y-Carol called us yesterday, we got in touch with you, and that's it. You said you were on your way, so I waited for you." I'm somehow relieved. I don't like the idea of Frohike going through Scully's things, even for a legitimate purpose. I have to fight the feeling I'm invading Scully's privacy myself as I start to roam around the apartment. When I remember Scully's cozy apartment at home, this place seems Spartan. Thin, mud-colored carpet in the living room, worn vinyl in the kitchen/dining area. The furniture must have come with the place; it doesn't look like anything Scully would buy if she had a choice. The whole place speaks of impermanence and transience. I hate that Scully has had to live like this. Yet, it's obvious that she's tried to make it a home of sorts. There's a small flowering plant on the dinette table. The towels in the kitchen are cheerful colors. I look through the cupboards, Frohike hovering at my shoulder. Not much here; Scully's favorite tea, a few spices. Baby cereal, jars of noxious-looking strained foods. The kitchen is spotless, but there are dishes in the drainer. A few baby bottles, a bowl, a glass. The things in the refrigerator are very Scully-like: water, juice, non-fat milk, yogurt, some more baby stuff. The living room is also neat as a pin. Even the magazines are fanned out nicely, which gives it the air of a doctor's waiting room. I pick up a couple to see what Scully's been reading. Nothing that reveals the Scully I know; these are home-maker magazines with pretty pictures of cheerful rooms. Maybe these are Scully's views of a normal life. I told Scully once that I'd never seen her as a mother. Later, when she made the comment about having a normal life, I realized I hadn't envisioned her in that way, either. By then, we both believed that at least the motherhood part probably wasn't going to happen. I wonder now, does she still have hopes for that kind of life? Did she hope that having a child would make it come true? I really don't think so. Scully may have dreams, but she's a realist, too. She's also told me since then that she chose to stay with me, and she keeps on choosing me. I just wonder if each time she makes that same choice, her life narrows a little more. That these magazines reveal a yearning that she still has. There's one magazine in particular that really catches my eye: "Single Parent Magazine." This is almost too much, but I won't lose it with Frohike looking on. But I hope she doesn't have a subscription to this one. I head to the bedroom, Frohike still at my heels. "You stay out here," I tell him. He raises his hands in surrender and backs off. "I think I'll go next door and talk to Carol," he says. Suits me just fine. I take a breath and enter her bedroom. Here, there are still no signs of a struggle, but definitely signs of a hasty departure. The closet door stands open. The bed is unmade. I pick up one of the pillows and press it to my face. Unmistakably Scully. I'm tempted to take the pillow with me. Instead, I put it back in place and smooth the bedclothes up and pull the bedspread over them. William's crib is next to the bed. Only the sheet covering the mattress is there. I imagine Scully lifting William up, blanket and all, and bundling him out of the apartment. A look into the closet reveals a few empty hangers and a pair of shoes. The bureau is almost full of Scully's things. The second drawer I open has some underthings in it, like she grabbed a few off the top and left the rest. I run my hands under the remaining items to see if anything else is hidden in the drawer, then I carefully smooth everything back into place. I do the same with the other drawers. The bottom one is empty except for a tiny pair of socks. Those I do pocket. I sit on the bed and try to imagine the circumstances. I don't think she was taken against her will. There's nothing here to indicate anything like that. She left in haste, but obviously took the time to pack a few things. She left her watch on the nightstand, but there's no toothbrush or hairbrush in the bathroom. Something must have scared Scully into running like that. I need to know more. I guess I need to talk to "Carol," much as I'd rather not, to get more details. As I stand up, I notice the nightstand drawer. I'd almost overlooked it. Scully evidently did, too, because she left something behind. It looks like a college composition book, the kind with the mottled black and white cardboard cover. It's held closed with an elastic band because there's things tucked between some of the pages. I take the band off and a few fall out onto the bed. They're pictures of William, meticulously dated. The book itself is written in Scully's own version of shorthand, but I can remember how to read some of it. It's a record of William's growth and development. It looks like Scully started it not long after she left DC. I wonder if she intended it for me. I want to think so, anyway. Regardless, it's coming with me. "Did you find anything?" Frohike asks as I enter the apartment next door. I shake my head. "I need to ask you some questions," I say to Carol. She inclines her head but doesn't say anything. "When did you notice she was gone? How long had she been gone when you noticed?" Carol goes over to a small monitor. "I didn't notice until the next morning, but I have a tape of the night before." She fiddles with the remote and runs the tape backward. We look at a grainy gray image of Scully's front door. There's a date and time stamp in the corner. The time reads 2:00 AM. Carol forwards the tape a little until we see a change. At 2:15:10, the door opened. Scully appeared, William in her arms, a backpack slung over her shoulder. She looked around cautiously. I can see the gun in her free hand. As we watch, she slowly walked out of the frame. This confirms my suspicions. Scully left of her own free will. Now I just have to figure out why, and hope that can tell me where. x-x-x-x Frohike and I are both pretty quiet on the way back to St. Paul. Carol, or Yves, as Frohike called her, couldn't tell us much more. She'd been away from the monitors for only a few minutes, during which Scully had made her escape. She hadn't looked at the tapes until the next morning, when Scully failed to follow her usual routine. I am still pissed but Carol's story reminded me uncomfortably of a stakeout of my own that I left for mere seconds, only to find the perp had been and gone in my short absence. We parted, if not cordially, at least civilly. Frohike sacks out in the back of the van while I drive the first leg. He'd suggested going back to St. Paul, absent any clues. I was all for canvassing the neighborhood, but conceded that it would probably cause more harm than good. "Byers and Langly will have come up with something while we were gone," Frohike said. He'd called to let them know we were coming back, and asked if they'd heard anything. "Scully had an emergency number," he told me. "She'll call it, I'm sure." I fervently hoped so. x-x-x-x My nightmares of abduction and torture have now been replaced by dreams of Scully. I'm more disturbed by this, and if possible, feel even more helpless than before. All I can do is wait, and hope. I have no idea where Scully's gone. She might not stay in one place, though if I know her at all, that's exactly what she'll do. She'll find a safe place and hole up there. I think I've figured out why she ran away. My own nightmares were the key. She was alone, she had no one to turn to, no one to talk to. The stress of keeping not just herself, but William, safe, had to be enormous. If she doesn't want to be found, she won't be found. I just hope that she's found a place where she can feel safe for a while. My biggest fear is that she'll decide to stay away forever. x-x-x-x The guys are on this. Byers put out the word to all the MUFON members in the Midwest to keep an eye out for Scully. I'm all for driving randomly around myself, but even I know that's pretty futile. So I wait, and hope, and trust that the guys are doing everything that can be done. Even though I'm sure Scully wasn't taken against her will, I feel just as helpless as I did then. Scully didn't use the emergency number Frohike sent her, but I think that's because it's in the journal I now have in my possession. I've got some of the entries translated and memorized now, and I'm working on the others. I find comfort in some of the words. "W smiled today. Very much like M, though I hope not so rare." "Thought W said `Da' today. Hasn't yet said Mama, but sometimes makes `mmm' sound. I talk to him every day. I tell him how much he looks like his daddy." I look at the pictures Scully took. Frankly, I don't see much of a resemblance, though his eyes look like mine. His nose doesn't look very big, at least not yet. "W is crawling all over. Already baby-proofed, but he figured out the cupboard locks. I put all the chemicals, etc. in the cupboard above the stove." That's my Scully, always a step ahead. It's good to be reminded of that. In between repeated readings of Scully's journal, and bugging the guys for any information, I continue to do research and work out my findings. It's hard to do it alone. The guys are willing to help, and there are others here at the site who are scientists, but I don't want their help. I want Scully's. I always felt I could come to conclusions faster because I had Scully to help me work through the facts. We know each other so well, and I'm having a hard time working with anyone else. I still have time on my hands, and my thoughts inevitably turn to Scully. I wonder more and more if she can possibly be satisfied with the kind of life I can offer her. It's about as far from normal as a person can get. We'll be on the run for the foreseeable future; and how much future we have seems to be in doubt. The guys have outdone themselves on our behalf. They've created a safe house that would definitely be the envy of the Witness Protection Program. Most of one of the large buildings on site is devoted to living space and recreational facilities. I have my own quarters, larger than my former apartment. I was surprised to discover that they'd brought some of my stuff from DC. "We gave you a two bedroom place so there'd be room for the kid," Langly said when they showed me. There was already a crib set up in the second room, though it wasn't furnished with much else. "What if Scully wants separate quarters?" I asked. They all looked shocked and hemmed and hawed. Byers finally spoke up. "Of course, there's plenty of room if that's what you want..." "It's not what I want," I said. "It's what Scully might want." I didn't want to make any assumptions on her part. "We'll keep the apartment closest to you for her," Byers said. "We weren't able to get any of her furniture, but we can order anything she needs." I nodded. I didn't like revealing my insecurities to the guys, but that last thing I wanted to do was assume that I knew what Scully wanted. We'd never had a chance to discuss our future before I left DC, and I didn't want to present it as a fait accompli to her. I realize that I made certain assumptions in the past, and now I've been wondering about things that I never gave a thought to before. Did Scully want to be courted? Would she rather have had a conventional relationship with me, one where we went on dates, where I left her at end of the evening with a goodnight kiss, brought her flowers? I'd always assumed Scully didn't care about things like that because I didn't. I thought I was letting her call the shots, though. I let her decide the when and the where. I figured if she wanted the "how" to be different, she'd have said something. It's true we've never talked much about our feelings, even to each other. Especially not to each other. Maybe I should have asked her. Maybe I should have told her how I felt sooner, or at least have done a better job of it once I finally did. For now, I'll just have to put that on my list of regrets. It's getting longer all the time. x-x-x-x Frohike makes the trip to Des Moines every week or so, just to check out the lay of the land. They guys are convinced that Scully's okay, and that she'll turn up. They tell me that this unexpected turn of events is convincing evidence that their countermeasure to the chip actually works. I don't know how they can say that, but I don't have any choice but to believe. I'm always edgier than usual on the days Frohike makes the trip to Des Moines. He always calls when he gets there and calls on the way home, just to let us know if he's discovered anything new. He hasn't so far. I guess I hope that he'll show up there one day and Scully will be back, as if she'd never left. I know it's ridiculously unlikely, but I like to think it could happen. When Frohike calls in the late afternoon to say that he has nothing new to report, I decide to go out for a run around the compound. It's huge, and there are paths all through it for running or biking. There's even a par course, and a basketball court. The guys told me that most of the landscaping and security features were in place when they took it over, though they added some additional measures of their own. Lodestone had been a failing dot-com when the guys decided to invest in it. They'd had a side-business in security programs and consulting for some time, and the money they earned through game programming allowed them to invest in even bigger opportunities. The grounds are great. This time of year, there are flowering trees and plants all over the place. There are picnic areas and areas that have been left more natural. I can almost forget that there's a tall electric fence around the entire perimeter, not to mention infrared sensors, cameras, and other high tech security systems, as well. So far, it's just the guys and me living here, though there's room for more. I have my own ideas about who else I'd invite to come here. I'm mindful of Jeremiah Smith's warning about concentrating too many of us in one location, and I'm aware that one day we'll probably have to separate. I'm hoping that by then, Scully and William will be with me, and *we* won't be separating. I hope not, anyway. I run myself hard. It helps, sometimes. I've been running a lot lately. Just another irony in my life. I'm staying in the same place, but I'm still running. I see Byers looking for me as I trudge back up the path to the buildings. This must mean something. Byers is the head of operations for the company, and he takes his job seriously. He's good at it, too. Langly is the chief programmer, or as it says on his business cards, "Master of Kung Fu." Frohike doesn't have a title or business cards, but he's the go-to guy for everything. He runs the covert operations side of the house, and he's also damned good at his job. "Byers," I greet him. "I don't usually see you out here." I'm a little worried, but I try not to let it show. "Frohike got a call from the emergency number," Byers said. "Scully's back." "You're sure?" I ask him. "You're absolutely sure." "Frohike left a number with the apartment manager, and someone called it this afternoon. He was on his way back here and he stopped to check his messages. She called just a little while ago. He's turned around and is going back there." "Are you sure?" I ask again. I don't want Frohike walking into a trap, no matter how much I want to see Scully. "Maybe he should wait for me, and I could go with him, just in case." Byers shakes his head. "It's really Scully. Frohike confirmed the sighting with Yves, too." Okay, so Yves has now redeemed herself in my eyes. A little, anyway. x-x-x-x I can't sleep. I don't know why I'm even bothering to try. I get up and pace around the apartment. I calculate again the soonest that Frohike might arrive back here with his precious charges. I pick up Scully's journal again. I wish there'd been a few pictures of her, too. I think of how she looked before I left. She'd let her hair grow longer, and she had a slightly more voluptuous look and feel than she'd ever had before, a wonderful by-product of her pregnancy. The surveillance video showed her hair as shorter, but the images weren't distinct enough to see much detail. Doesn't matter how she looks, as long as I can look at her. x-x-x-x I'm wandering all over the facility. It's a Saturday, and I can have the run of the place, though the guys expect me to keep a low profile during the week. They've screened their employees well, but we figure the less people who see me here, the better. Trust No One. I should needlepoint it on a pillow. I wander around the front building and find Byers, who looks like he's been doing the same thing. "No sign of them," Byers says. "They should be here by late afternoon, even if Frohike stopped for the night." I wonder fleetingly what we could do if they don't show up? No one could keep me here then, I'd be out scouring every inch of the road, and everything else, between here and Des Moines, for as long as it took. Byers sees my expression and he has a worried look on his face. "They're fine," he reassures me. I know that part of my worry has to do more with what will happen once they're here. This is the turning point. We've been on the run, in one way or another, for a long time. We've been forced apart by people and events beyond our control for years. They've separated us by force, by deception, by attempts to seduce us. We've always found our way back to each other, in the end. I don't want it to be all for nothing, now that we have a chance. I find myself back outside my apartment. Scully and William will have to stay here for a bit until we know what she wants to do. I'll give her the bed, and make sure she knows I'm not part of the deal unless she wants it. I haven't been sleeping in it, anyway. If I can't be with Scully, I might as well sleep on the sofa. The message light is blinking on the phone when I walk through the door. My heart begins to race again. It's Byers, as I'd hoped. "They're here. We're taking them to The Thinker." Who the hell is that? Then I remember; the guys thought it was cool to name the conference rooms after people they knew or admired. The problem is, I never go to their meetings, so I can't remember where they are, half the time. I know it's somewhere on the first floor of the main building, so I'll figure it out by process of elimination. As I enter the main corridor, I hear voices. Byers. Langly. Is that Scully speaking? I pick up the pace a bit. I'm glad the door to the conference room is open. I feel as nervous as I did the day I returned from Tunguska and walked into the Senate hearing room. Langly says something about John Nash, and I hear Scully ask if he's here. Sounds like a cue to me. "Don't be silly, Scully." I say as I enter the room. "He's too high-profile now. We had to turn him down." Scully turns at the sound of my voice. Oh, I remember that look. I know I have a stupid grin on my face, but I don't care. I look like hell, anyway. But Scully...oh my god, I've never seen anyone look so good in all my life. She's got William in her arms, and the biggest smile I've ever seen on her face. I can't move; all I can do is look at them. Then William speaks. "DA!" is all he says, but it breaks the spell. He's reaching for me, Scully's reaching for me, I reach for Scully and William, and pull them both into my arms. There's a commotion behind me, but I only have ears and eyes for Scully and William. I feel Scully's head on my chest, and William next to her. I'm murmuring to Scully, saying everything I've held inside for so long, in my own verbal shorthand. "Scully," I say again and again. "Scully. Scully." I never want to let them go. The guys have left the room, closing the door behind them. I'm glad; all I want is this moment, one perfect moment together before we go on. At last, I hold my family in my arms. ===== end of Part Four; concluded in Part Five. ===== Apart 5: Adjustment by ML William, his face smeared with mashed bananas, watches from his ringside seat as I move around the kitchen. I turn to smile at him and he smiles back. He looks so like Scully when he does that, it's a good thing he can't talk yet. If he asked me for something, I'd give it to him, without hesitation. He offers me a fistful of banana, and I nibble on his fingers, which makes him shriek with glee. Who'd have thunk that Fox Mulder, Special Agent, would be a daddy, and would enjoy it this much? If only the old gang in VICAP could see me now. In the few weeks since Scully and William arrived at this place, I've transformed from Bachelor Boy to Domestic God. Well, not entirely, but my life has made a 180 degree course change from its usual trajectory. I'd like to say I couldn't be happier, but there are plenty of things that still need to be resolved. There's the small matter of finding a way to destroy the super soldiers other than luring them into a quarry. I sense that it's a gambit that won't work very often. I personally would like to know why it's so important that either my son or I die. Call me touchy, but it's definitely high on my list of Things to Know and Prevent. And of course, there's the virus, which no doubt has mutated again, the still impending threat of alien invasion, not knowing who to trust, and so on. Same circus, different clowns. All of these matters have a certain urgency to them, but I have other things on my mind tonight. First and foremost, my mind is on Scully. I still can hardly believe that she and William are here with me, and safe. x-x-x-x The day they walked into Lodestone headquarters, bedraggled and exhausted both physically and emotionally, was the best day of my life, period. I'd been apart from them for so long, and though I kept my game face on for the boys, until they arrived, I feared I might never see them again. Since that day, things have happened quickly. A little too quickly, and lately I've had a sense of time slipping away from me. We were barely reunited before we started sharing what we'd learned about the forces ranged against us, and planning how to deal with them. It feels good to be with Scully again. I had been looking forward to the resumption of our working relationship just as much as our personal one. It's not really the same, though. Something is missing from both, and I want that something back. It's not her fault, or mine. We've had a lot going on since then. Scully's been working hard to get the lab up to her standards, and she's had some catching up to do on what we know about the super soldiers and their genetic make-up. And then, there's the small matter of William. He's not a demanding baby, but he can't do anything for himself yet, and he needs constant care and attention. We seem to feed, burp, bathe, change, and put him down for a nap on about a four-hour cycle. It hasn't left us much time for privacy. And, I'm sad to say it, no time at all for intimacy. Yes, Scully and I have been sharing a bed, but that's about it. I end up doing a lot of my work in the evening after Scully has gotten home and can spend some time with William. Most nights, I'm still at the computer when Scully calls it a night. She's asleep when I come to bed, and I hate to wake her when I know William will be needing her attention again before long. Sometimes we share a little cuddling, maybe a kiss or two, and it's lights out. Not the way I envisioned things at all. x-x-x-x I grab a washcloth and start to wipe William down. He's not crazy about this part of the routine, but he tolerates it most of the time. This afternoon he's not feeling particularly cooperative. "C'mon, William," I mutter, as he wriggles around in his high chair. He throws a gob of banana on the floor and I stoop to clean it up. I'm not usually that particular about a messy floor, but I don't want to do a pratfall and end up in traction. William might find it funny, but it would wreck my plans for the evening. I've been spending a lot of time with William. It just makes sense for me to stay home with him. Scully can't do her lab work from here, and most of the work I do is computer research these days. The FBI auditor would be so proud of me. I was pretty nervous about staying with William alone, I'll admit, but we seemed to hit it off. I was afraid William would see me as an interloper, someone who was taking Scully's attention away from him. He has no worries on that head. Scully is so attuned to him that she knows what he needs at the first whimper. I don't know that I'll ever have that kind of connection with William. It's something I'll never tire of seeing between them, and I can't help but be a bit envious of it. It was very hard for Scully to leave William the first time she went to the lab. I know she was tempted to take William with her. I didn't try to talk her out of it, at least not directly. The first morning, we walked over with her to the main building and waited for the elevator together. "You trust me with him, don't you, Scully?" I asked her. I held William with one arm, and her with the other. "Of course I do, Mulder," she replied. "It's just..." I knew without her finishing the sentence. It's just that she hadn't had him out of her sight for the past several months. Even though she knew he was safe with me. I saw that Scully was torn by the twin desires of mothering William, and stepping back into her professional life. I finally got her to go by promising to bring him by midway through the morning. "You can come home for lunch, too," I said. "You can take as long as you want, or not work at all if you don't want to." She squared her shoulders. "I'll be fine, Mulder. It's just taking some adjusting." She kissed William, then me, then William again. Then she got on the elevator. "Okay, William," I said. "Don't make a liar out of me. Let's show Mom how well the guys can do on their own." I'd been practicing the diaper-changing and bathing routines, with Scully's hovering assistance, for the past week. I've done okay with both, for the most part. Feeding is another matter. William is taking some solids now, and Scully has been starting to wean him. I don't know if she ever had any trouble with him, but for William, meal time is a game, and one where his dad doesn't know the rules. The first couple of times I wore more food than I got into William. This is one of those times. William shrieks -- he's been doing that a lot lately, especially when my ear is in close range -- and throws another handful of banana. He laughs. "You're not helping, buddy," I tell him, and he shrieks gleefully again. It's a good thing the Gunmen's quarters are on the other side of the building. If we had neighbors, they'd probably be calling child protective services. I give up, temporarily, to try and finish the food preparation. The casserole I'm making has to bake for a while. I'd planned it that way on purpose, the better to get William ready, and get myself cleaned up, before Scully arrives. Tonight is Pamper Scully Night. William's going to stay with the guys, and I'm planning a special dinner. I've got flowers, candles, music, chocolate, and a movie. It's date night, the date we've never gone on. I want this night to be about fun, and relaxation, and forgetting about the world outside. This is my way of saying, "time out." I don't want us to just get sucked into the next big crisis, or as Scully herself once said, become merely the subjects of an unending X-File. If we are to survive what's to come, and protect William, we need this. My theory is, once we get the personal stuff right, the professional stuff will fall into place, too. We've been dancing around each other since our reunion, and not in a good way. We kind of got started off on the wrong foot, I guess. And for some reason, it's been difficult to broach the subject. We talk about work. We talk about William, though not as in-depth about either as I think we should. We haven't talked at all about ourselves and our feelings. I'm not as uncertain about things as I once was. I'm pretty sure, strike that, I *know* that Scully loves me. But the personal side of things is not going as smoothly as I hoped they would once we were reunited. I reflect that maybe part of that is my fault. Regardless of my confidence about Scully's feelings for me, I have been a little reluctant to assume that everything's fine between us, and that we can go back to the old status quo. The thing is, there never really has been a status quo. Someone once asked me if I had a significant other. I kind of stumbled over the answer. Scully is without question the most significant relationship I have in my life, but not in any conventional way. It goes with the unconventional territory we cover. Every time I thought we might have a small respite, a stretch of time to relax and regroup, and maybe *talk* about where we were headed, something else happened. I'd say it was a conspiracy, but I think it's just plain bad timing. I had a lot of time to think about this while we were apart this time. When I was abducted, I didn't even know Scully was pregnant. It was a huge shock to come back and find out that she was, and to know that I was the father. It took me a while to adjust to both ideas. Now I've had so much time to think about it that I've passed beyond acceptance to self-doubt. Not that I'm ever very far from there, anyway. That's a pattern in my relationship with Scully I'd like to change. I think Scully is where I was when I was returned. Not sure of where she fits in, or if she made the right decision to leave DC. It's my job to see that she does not regret her decision. x-x-x-x At last I've got the chicken browned and everything's in the oven. I thought about doing something a little fancier than a chicken and rice casserole, but my cooking skills are decidedly rusty. And with the kid around, we're lucky to get canned soup most nights. "Da! Dow'! Dow'!" William is demanding. I lift him out of the high chair and let him crawl around the kitchen floor while I wipe out the dishes. He can't get into the other rooms; thanks to the Gunmen, we have a baby gate for every door. William hasn't figured out how to unlatch them yet. The Gunmen are proud that they can stay one step ahead of the kid, at least for now. I lean against the kitchen counter and watch William as he unearths his favorite saucepan lid and bangs it on the floor. I go back to my chores to the percussive sounds of William the One Man Band. I've been looking for it, but I haven't seen any evidence yet of unusual behavior in William. In the journal Scully kept while we were apart, she seemed to be watching for signs. We've both been told at different times that he's "special," but no one has actually told us why or how. William spooked Scully so badly not long after I left that she won't allow a mobile over his crib. She's very resistant to the idea that William is "different" in any way. I know she'd like to raise William as a normal child, and give him the kind of life she had. I think she realizes by now that this won't be possible. I wish I could give her that. I wish I could give her everything she deserves. I will at least give her what I can. x-x-x-x One of the things I resolved to do when I left DC, was to try and make sense of my abduction and where it figured into the big picture. I was driven away not so much out of fear for myself, but fear that not knowing what had happened to me would somehow bring harm to Scully and William. I can't say I found all the answers I sought. As usual, I was left with more questions. But I discovered enough to allay any fear that I could become something that would turn on Scully and William. It had been close; closer than I want to think about. Scully saved me from a fate that was literally worse than death. I didn't just discover things about myself on my travels, I discovered some things about Scully as well. When she went missing with William, I had an epiphany of sorts about her. I saw a side of her that I'd seldom thought about. She'd dropped hints to me in the past, and I guess I'd filed them away in some dark recess of my brain. When I searched Scully's apartment in Des Moines, all these hints from over the years coalesced the many disparate images I'd collected of Scully. I'd seen her as an agent, a doctor, a partner, friend, and finally, a lover. What I hadn't seen or understood yet was Scully as a woman. Yeah, sure, I *know* Scully's a woman, but that's never been the way I'd describe her first. Scully is -- Scully. She's an extraordinary human being. But beyond the Scully I know and love with all my heart, is the woman who longed for a child of her own. The woman who, even when driven away from her life, tried to keep some beauty around her, even if it was only pictures in magazines. This is the part of Scully I dismissed in the past, that I didn't even try to understand, because it didn't fit in with my view of her. It couldn't because the kind of normal life Scully talked about seemed to exclude me. Because of that, I think I was scared away. I rejected that part of her. Stupid, isn't it? The man who's faced down bioterrorists and survived an alien abduction is terrified of a five-foot- two female. Well, she *does* carry a gun. Or maybe I'm just a commitment-phobe. That's a phrase I've seen on the cover of women's magazines now and then. You know, the ones that tell you if you're single, female, and unattached, it's just because you haven't found Mr. Right, and by damn, we're going to help you find him. And when you do, we'll show you how to Bend Him to Your Will. I've never seen Scully reading any of those magazines, but I've read some of them while standing in the checkout line at the supermarket. Gotta know what the opposition is planning, after all. Except that I've never looked at Scully as the opposition, not in that way. She has opposed me as a scientist, sure. But I never felt that she was a predatory female. Believe me, I know the difference. Exhibit A, Phoebe Green; Exhibit B, Diana Fowley. Even though it took me a long time to realize it. I'd have liked it if Scully at least occasionally showed some awareness of me as a man, but she never did. My reaction to being ignored was to tease her and pile on the innuendo, to touch her, tower over her, anything to elicit the response I hoped for. But nothing I ever did seemed to faze Scully in the least. The truth is, Scully is just really good at hiding her feelings. In the field we're in, she can't afford any sign of weakness, or to give tit for tat and expect to be taken seriously. It's only rarely that Scully has let me see her fun-loving side, the "girly" Scully. The "Dana" part of her, for want of a better term. I treasure those glimpses of her: The Scully who enjoyed being shown how to swing a bat, even though I'm pretty sure she already knew how. The Scully who danced with me in Memphis. The one who giggled and waved a Bureau credit card at me as a come-on, one night in Hollywood. I want to know all the Scullys there are, and the Danas, too. I realize that the woman who is all the things I know, and more besides, is just waiting for the right time and place to reveal herself. I want that time and place to be tonight. Not that I kid myself that I'm going to sweep her off her feet and that everything we've been struggling with will suddenly become clear, and easy to say. But I'd like to open the door a little wider than it is right now. I'm tired of being an absentee lover. x-x-x-x My kitchen duties done, I scoop William off the floor and take him into the bathroom. I'm especially proud of my bathing method. I strip both of us down, and we shower together. I'm not sure Scully would approve, but I'm very careful with him. I don't find it nearly as much fun as showering with Scully would be, and it's a bit more difficult logistically, but William seems to enjoy it. I've actually grown to like using baby shampoo. My hair has never been softer. I wrap William in a towel and set him next to me on the bath mat as I quickly towel off. In a flash, he's left the towel behind and rapidly crawls toward the bedroom. "Not so fast, Naked Boy," I say, and grab him back, lifting him high. More shrieks of glee. I'm glad he finds his old man so funny. I wrap the towel around him again and plop him on the bed as I pull on some sweatpants. It's warm enough inside that I just put a diaper on him. I'd love to try and put him down for a nap, but I don't think he'll cooperate. Besides, Scully will be here any time now, and the Gunmen are due to come get William right after that. Instead, I warm William's bottle and grab an iced tea for myself, and we settle on the sofa for a little quiet time. I try not to obsess over tonight. I'm afraid if I pin too much on it, it will collapse under the weight of my expectations. After all, I'm springing this on Scully. Maybe I should have said something this morning. I hate being so insecure. I so want this evening to be just right for her, and of course for me. x-x-x-x As I've said, Scully was pretty much exhausted the day she and William arrived at Lodestone. Not that I caught onto that all by myself, though I should have. I know how I felt when I was on my own. It had to have been that much harder for Scully. She had not only herself, but William to take care of. But I was so glad to see them, safe and whole, that I couldn't see the obvious signs. In fact, the first afternoon, I was a little put out at Scully. It was my fault, really. All I could think of was having some time alone with her, just to touch her, look at her, be with her. After we got William settled, I looked forward to a long afternoon of nothing but Scully. We did share a few kisses, and nothing will ever be as sweet to me as feeling Scully in my arms after being so long apart. But as soon as we sat down and I had her cuddled against my side, she fell asleep. I tried to ignore the blow to my ego, and just enjoyed the feeling of Scully's warm body pressed up against me, and hearing her soft breathing. Didn't I say that it would be enough just to be with her? Okay, so I lied. I didn't know how hard it would be to sit there and just watch her sleep. There was so much I wanted to hear from her, and to say to her. After an hour or so, I picked her up and carried her to bed. That seemed to set a precedent that's been hard to break. x-x-x-x I'm lying on the sofa and William is drowsing on my naked chest when I hear the beep and click of the electronic lock. "Hey buddy," I murmur, "Mom's home." William barely moves except to anchor his thumb more securely in his mouth. I decide to stay put. "Hey, Scully," I say softly as she walks in the door. She looks even better to me than she did the first day back. Her hair is longer, and she's kept it the blond-ish color she'd let it go to while on the run. She doesn't look nearly so tired, and the hunted look is gone from her eyes. I like to think that I have something to do with that. Well, me, and the sense of security this place gives her. She smiles a bit as she catches sight of us lolling on the sofa. "Another busy day, I see," she comments. "You have no idea," I tell her as she approaches. "Care to join us?" She shakes her head. "I'd rather just look at you." Ooh, that's a promising opening. Scully kneels down and kisses William. "Hey, Sweetie," she says. William wriggles a little and raises his head, strings of drool cascading from his mouth. "I think he drooled on you," Scully remarks. "Wouldn't be the first time," I reply. "Like mother, like son." "Very funny, Mulder," she says, giving me a light smack on the arm that turns into a caress. "Not in front of the child, Scully," I say in mock protest. "How was your day at the office, Dear?" She smiles again at my joking endearment and shakes her head. "No breakthroughs yet, Mulder. It's a tedious process." I start to say that I wasn't expecting any breakthroughs, but I don't want to begin that discussion. Scully has very high expectations of herself, and while rationally she knows better, I think she starts each day with that hope. Instead, I say, "We can talk about it later. Why don't you go change, and we can relax a little." I'd like to get up and take her in my arms right now, but I'm a little hampered by drowsy baby. Scully nods and stands up, brushing her fingertips along my arm again before she goes. She's been doing that more the last couple of days. I think it's a hopeful sign. By the time Scully's done showering and changing, I've got William and myself dressed and the guys are on their way. Scully notices William's bag by the door right away. "Mulder, what's going on?" She sounds a little fearful. "It's okay," I say. "William's going to stay with the guys tonight." As I finish speaking, there's a rat-a-tat-tat on the door. Scully takes William from me and for a moment I think she's going to refuse. We look at each other over the top of William's head and there's another knock on the door. Scully nods the tiniest bit and kisses William's forehead. For his part, he's silent, his blue-gray eyes bright and watchful. I open the door to the guys. I'll never get used to seeing Byers in what passes for casual: a pressed Oxford cloth shirt and twill pants, finished with tasseled loafers. Give him a cardigan and he could almost be Mr. Rogers. "Good evening, Agent Scully, Mulder," he says formally. "Dana," Scully reminds him gently. She steps back to allow the three to enter. William catches sight of Frohike and begins to bounce in Scully's arms. I don't know why, but Frohike appears to be William's favorite. "It's okay, Scully," I say. "I've already briefed them, they know exactly what to do." Another long moment of Scully looking at me, then she kisses William and hands him over to Frohike. I recognize the importance of the gesture. Scully trusts these guys. But it doesn't keep her from saying, "Do you know how to change him? Mulder, did you pack his favorite toy? Are there plenty of diapers?" "Believe me, Dana, we've got it all covered," Byers says, and Langly rolls his eyes. He picks up William's bag. "Jeez, this weighs a ton!" "You guys know the drill," I say. "Don't hesitate to call." I've given them what amounts to a book of instructions, and one of them has spent time with me every day this week, learning how to change diapers and the like. They're non- violent guys, but if I give them one more direction, I think they might revise their philosophy. Frohike nods. "Don't worry. Have a good time. Don't do anything *I* wouldn't do." I bite back a crushing reply and shut the door on them. When I turn, I see Scully watching me, her eyes darting from the door to me, then back again. "You okay?" I ask softly. She nods, biting her lower lip. I can't resist any longer. I pull her into my arms. She's tense against me but I can feel her begin to relax a little as I hold her. After a few long minutes, I feel her arms around my waist. I stroke her back softly. She holds me a little tighter, and I let go to tip her face up to mine. "I'm sorry, I guess I should have told you," I tell her. "I didn't mean to scare you." She shakes her head and I brush the hair away from her face, cradling it in my hands. We simply look at each other for a long minute until I give in to myself and lower my mouth to hers. I intend this to be a comfort kiss, a way to reassure Scully (and myself) that everything's okay. It's Scully who makes it into something a little more intense. She parts her lips just a little and lets her tongue slide along my lower lip. This is one of her favorite moves, and it never fails to turn me on. Before I know what's hit me, we're on the sofa, still locked in our kiss. I think dazedly of all the smartass comments I could make about Scully being a cheap date, but fortunately for me my mouth is otherwise occupied. I have to admit that I hoped for this, but I didn't expect it. Part of me is really, really glad about it, and is an eager participant. I let my hands roam over Scully's body the way I've wanted to do for so long. She's doing the same to me, and we barely pause to draw breath before we're kissing again. This isn't the way I wanted it to be. I don't want Scully to think I only set this evening up as a means to an end, as much as I'm enjoying it. I have to stop this before it gets out of hand. I reluctantly pull away from Scully, and take her hands in mine. "Hey, Scully," I say gently. "Slow down a little. The guys aren't charging by the hour." To my surprise, Scully blushes and drops her hands. I immediately regret my words, even more so when she pushes up off the sofa and walks away. "I thought that this was what you wanted," Scully says. "Huh?" I say stupidly. "You went to a lot of trouble, Mulder," she says, gesturing at the nicely set table, the flowers and the candles. "You didn't really have to." Scully obviously has her own ideas about what I'm doing. Suddenly this evening isn't about her any longer, it's all about me. Again. Dammit. It's my turn to say something, but I'm having a little trouble regrouping here. Scully helps me out. "Mulder...why are you doing this?" As usual, the part of me to recover fastest is my smartass reflex. "Jeez, Scully," I mutter, unable to help myself. "I just wanted to fix you dinner." Scully shakes her head, and I can see she's not going to accept this. I see the barest hint of a smile. "I know you, Mulder. You have a larger agenda. Out with it." "Just what I said, Scully," I say. "With everything that's happened, we've never really ... you know, gone out, had dinner, or anything." "We have dinner together all the time. We did before." She's standing, hands on her hips, in the same kind of argumentative pose I've seen so many times. "Not just for the sake of going out," I say. She's going to make me say it. "You know, a date." "A date." She says it flatly, and I can't tell if she's happy about it or not. "You want to go out on a date." "Yeah, remember those? I do, sort of. Maybe I'm not doing it right, though?" "Well," she says, "it's customary to ask the person you want to date first. And you usually go *out* somewhere." Oh man, she's mad at me. I may be spending the night at the Gunmen with William if I'm not careful. I open my mouth to apologize and Scully says, "I'm not mad, Mulder. I just didn't expect this." Whew. I smile at her. "Well, I'm a little rusty at this, so bear with me, okay?" I dash into the kitchen and grab the wine and glasses. As an afterthought, I turn off the oven, too. Just in case. I sit down next to her and pour the wine. We raise our glasses and touch them together. "To new beginnings," I say. Scully nods. "To our future," she adds. Our future. I do like the sound of that. I wonder if it's too soon to give her the little speech I've been mulling over in my head. Scully nudges me with her shoulder. "Where are you, Mulder?" I turn to smile at her. "Just thinkin'." "Are you going to share?" I clear my throat. It's now or never. "Well, I was just wondering, if you could have everything the way you wanted, what would it be like?" "What do you mean, Mulder?" Scully asks cautiously. "Sky's the limit, Scully. Where would you live, what would you be doing, who would --" "Mulder." She holds up her hand. "Is this what tonight's really all about? Because I don't think I want to play this game." "I'm not trying to upset you, Scully. A long time ago, you asked me if I'd ever wanted a normal life. Ever since then, I've wondered what that means to you." "Why, Mulder? So you can beat yourself up about how you've deprived me of what I most want? I'm not going there with you, so you can just drop it right now." "It's not such an impossible dream, is it, Scully? Just tell me what you want. If I can give you even a piece of it, I will. I know I can't give it all to you, much as I wish I could." "Mulder, please don't. I'm not keeping a balance sheet, I never have. We have a partnership. We give and take, it's what we do. Isn't that what a partnership is all about? You don't have to do anything." I nod at her. "Yes, I do. You've given up so much to be here with me. I want to give you something back. Whatever you want, Scully. Just tell me what it is." It's such a pitifully small something, I think. Let me do this for you. "If there's something you want, even it seems trivial, could you let me know about it? Now more than ever, we need to take care of each other, and William, too. This is home, at least for now. We should do whatever we can to make it ours." Scully looks around the room. The layout is different but it bears an uncanny resemblance to my apartment, right down to the fish tank, thanks to the guys, who approximated my furnishings as closely as they could. I wish it looked more like Scully's. Her place always looked more like home to me. "We aren't going to be here forever, are we?" she asks. I shake my head. "I'm not even sure for how long, Scully. We're safe, for now, but we'll have to plan for the future." "I guess I don't want to get too attached to `things' again, Mulder," she says. "I miss my apartment and the life I led, I won't lie to you. But after you left, it seemed so hollow. William was the only thing that mattered to me. That, and finding a way for us to be together again." "That's good to hear," is all I can manage to say. Scully sips her wine, not looking at me. She's struggling with something, that much I can tell. She's become totally serious. "What I want ..." she starts, and her lips tremble a little. "Someone else asked me that, not so long ago." I want to ask who, but I keep my mouth shut for once. This isn't easy for her, and I don't want to distract her with an outburst. "I said, I want what I should want at this time of my life." She doesn't elaborate. She doesn't have to. "Please believe me when I tell you, Mulder, I have what I most want. I do. Maybe not in a way that most people would understand it, but I do." I wait. "You've given me more than I ever dared hope for," she continues. "You gave me hope when I had none left. You gave me your faith, your belief. You gave me courage and the strength to go on when I didn't think I could do it alone. Most of all, you've given me a part of yourself. You gave me William." The tears are streaking down her cheeks as she says this last part. I risk reaching over to brush the tears away with my thumb, and cup her cheek. She leans into me and I continue to rub her cheek with my thumb lightly as she continues. "What I'm trying to tell you, Mulder, is that the things I want are not set in stone, except for this: my idea of home is where you and William are. In a shack, in a tent, or in a cave, if it comes to that." I can't help but smile a bit at the image of Scully in a cave, a la the Flintstones. "I hope it won't, Scully. But even if our stay here is brief, I want you to have whatever you need. I just don't want either of us to lose sight of what's important. You're important to me, Scully, you and William. More than finding answers, more than anything. You're why I want to find the answers. Without you, there's no reason to do any of this." I shrug a little and look at her. "I wanted to make sure you know it, that's all." Her eyes well up again. "Mulder..." It's the same sweet tone she used when I gave her the doll, and I know I've said the right thing. She puts her hand over mine. "I do know it now, Mulder." She knows it *now*? I've been doing a piss-poor job of telling her how I feel, that's pretty obvious. She adds, "I just want you to know, I'm glad that you ... want me. I was afraid maybe you didn't any more." I'm dumbfounded at this. "How could you think that?" She can hardly meet my eyes. "Well... you stay up all hours, you never come to bed until after I'm asleep..." I can hardly believe what I'm hearing, when I've spent so many nights beside her, wishing I dared wake her up... "Scully, if it takes me the rest of my life to show you how much I want you, I'll do it. I don't want to leave you any room for doubt." I smile at her and add with a dramatic sigh, "Maybe it would have been better if I'd just let you jump my bones and have done with it." Scully finally gives me a full-on smile in return. "And then have you complain that I'm just keeping you around for sex? Nothing doing, Mulder." Oh, this is nice. I think I missed this more than the sex. Well, almost as much, anyway. "Well, I don't want you to think I'm keeping you around just because you're good in the lab," I counter. "C'mere, Scully." She scoots over to me and I put my arm around her. "Don't I get dinner first?" she says. "It'll keep," I say, nuzzling her neck. "But this won't." I pull her onto my lap, and set about showing her what I've been dreaming about since we've been apart. Her lips part under mine and there's no doubt in my mind that the wanting and needing is mutual. I'm going to make damned sure that Scully knows it, too. x-x-x-x Scully's still sleeping when I come back to the bedroom with breakfast. I'd like to say I know she got a good night's sleep, but I'm prouder to say that she didn't. Neither did I, but it's all about quality, not quantity. And when we slept, we slept *good*. I sit on the edge of the bed and watch her. I'm trying to let her wake up on her own but my inner gentleman is already losing the battle. I reach out and touch her foot through the blankets. "Hey, Scully," I whisper loudly. "You hungry?" She certainly should be; a midnight snack of strawberries and whipped cream doesn't make much of a dinner. "Mmmm," she says, and opens her eyes. "Depends on what's for breakfast." "All your favorites," I say. "Bacon, eggs, and pancakes." "Those sound like your favorites, Mulder." She sits up, pulling the blankets around her in an adorable display of modesty. I hand her my tee shirt to put on. She looks better in it than I do, anyway. In the next minute I see her fully wake up and kick into Mommy Mode. "Where's William? Is he home yet? How is he?" "I just talked to Byers. He's fine, eating his breakfast right now. They'll bring him over in an hour. D'you want me to call and have them bring him back right now?" Scully relaxes a little and shakes her head. "I can't believe I didn't think of him immediately when I woke up." "You did, Scully. And I'm pretty proud that I can make you stop thinking about him for just a few minutes now and then." Scully rolls her eyes at me, but I think I see a hint of a smile, too. If do anything for Scully that's anywhere close to what she does for me, she's lucky to remember her own name. Besides, she's not the only one who has a hard time not thinking of William. I called the guys late last night when I got up to get the strawberries. Langly wasn't pleased, but Scully and I were reassured. I'm already making plans for our next date night. We sit side by side, eating our breakfast off of one plate. "How long has it been since we've taken any personal time, Mulder?" Scully asks, snatching the last slice of bacon. I grab at it and manage to break it in two. "You mean, when we haven't been recovering from some injury?" "Exactly." She runs her fingers through the syrup on the plate and I grab her hand to lick them off. "Too long to think about. Years." I can say exactly when I did, but it's not a memory I want to bring up. "I think we need to play hooky today, Mulder," Scully says. "With William. I think we need to pack a picnic lunch, and go outside and enjoy the fresh air, and stop thinking about things, just for a while." Scully is finally telling me what she wants. I'm not surprised to realize I want it, too. A chance to be a family, at least for a little while. "I've been thinking about what you said last night, Mulder, and I think you're right." "I was? What time? Gotta make a note of that." Scully hits me lightly on my knee. "Be serious for just a minute, Mulder. When you said we need to take care of each other. You, and me, and William." She rests her head on my shoulder. "We're each other's family now." I kiss the top of her head. "Yes we are, Scully. And we will take care of each other. No matter what." She looks up at me and her eyes are filled with trust and love. I see myself reflected back in them, and William, too. I'm so grateful that we're finally together. No matter what's to come, we are stronger for it. Scully and me, facing the future side by side. And William makes three. "Come on, Scully," I say, pulling her off the bed. "I think we might have time for a shower before the guys bring William back home." Scully raises her eyebrow. "Together, Mulder?" "Of course, Scully. How else will we wash each other's backs?" She tries not to laugh at this, and fails. Gotcha, Scully. Gotcha big time. end. ===== "Never doubt that a small group of committed people can change the world; indeed, it is the only thing that ever has." -Margaret Mead ===== Author's Notes and Acknowledgments: But first, a word from our sponsor: This story took me a long time to write, and I'm pretty sure it's the longest one I've ever attempted. I'd really like to know if you thought the time was worth it (or not, as the case may be). Any and all comments appreciated at: mailto: msnsc21@aol.com As you can see, I'm not too proud to beg . First of all, HUGE thanks to Mo for reading and encouragement when I was really floundering and doubting that I'd ever get this done. Thanks, Mo! Your encouragement was just what I needed. You do a great job! Big hugs to you! Another big acknowledgment is to the creative team of the X-Files and TenThirteen, whose stories I've watched unfold for lo these nine years. Thanks to everyone, from the Head Honcho to the actors, writers, directors, techies, and all. I'm going to miss you! You might call this "mytharc lite," since I tried to integrate some of what's gone on over the years into the story, but didn't try to explain it all. Any and all errors or discrepancies are my own, no one to blame but me. I did do research, and got my mind around the super soldier idea to the best of my abilities. I left a lot of loose threads, but you know that the story doesn't end at fade-out, right? There may be more to come... I used most of the same websites I acknowledged in "Abandoned," so I won't repeat them here, but I used a couple of other sites I'd like to mention. www.uhaul.com. I'm not kidding. There are links to some very interesting subjects. I used the Iowa link to find out more about the Manson Crater. www.amtrak.com. I owe this story in some measure to a trip I made on Amtrak not long ago, so I want to acknowledge the inspiration, and of course use of their site to work out some timetables. Just a plug for old train stations, and train travel in general. Many of the larger cities not only use their train stations for transportation hubs (which I hope MY city will do), many of them have been beautifully restored and are a treat to wander around in. Even if you're not fleeing across country, train travel is the way to go. Just make sure you've got plenty of time. One last plug: Kimpa has been kind enough to maintain a site for my stories and she even creates beautiful dust covers for many of them. Stop by and see her site at www.kimpart.com Well! Not only the longest story, but the longest notes I've ever written. If you've gotten this far, thanks again for reading! April 3, 2002.