Title: Phantom Pains (Part Six of the Trefoil Series) Classification: SRA Keywords: S/O, MSR/UST, AU Rating: R for language and sex Distribution: anywhere, just let me know Disclaimer: These characters don't belong to me, they belong to Mr. Chris Carter, lucky bastard. Feedback: please to lil_gusty@hotmail.com Thanks: at the end Note: This is the sixth part of the Trefoil Series. It begins with "The Longest Time," "Practice," "Signs From God," "Next Step," and "If You See Her." They can be found at Ephemeral or Gossamer. Summary: Perfection isn't always what it seems. Warning: If you thought that the previous parts were angsty, you ain't seen nothin' yet. <><><><><><> "My, oh, my, you sure know how to arrange things. You set it up so well, so carefully. Ain't it funny how your new life didn't change things? You're still the same old girl you used to be." ~ The Eagles <><><><><><> The harsh lights of Hartsfield International Airport reflect off the newly polished floor in sickening, pale white cubes, making my sinuses throb in time with my heartbeat, making me choke back bile and weak coffee as I try and find the nearest restroom. I vomit a little, mostly stomach acid and dry heaves, making my throat and mouth burn, leaning against the cool, metal wall, panting, and desperate for some water to wash the bitter taste away. Surprisingly, the floor and walls are clean, so I linger longer than I should, until someone asks if I'm all right, if I need help. No, I tell her, I'm fine. She offers to fetch my traveling companion and I tell her that I don't have one, but thank her anyway. She leaves me alone in the blessed hum of silence and I unsteadily rise to my feet, shiver a little in the overly chilled bathroom, then venture out to find my luggage. After collecting everything, I load them into a handy wheeled cart that has a sign on the front which, in seven different languages, declares "Welcome to Atlanta." For fun, I decipher the German, trace my fingers over the odd, Japanese characters, and try my French and Italian pronunciation. I wheel the creaky metal cart over to the row of pay phones and stare at them. Out of five, two are occupied, one by a woman trying to corral a screaming toddler and communicate with the person on the other end of the receiver. She looks frustrated and embarrassed and I consider going to help her. Our eyes meet and she turns away from me, yanking her child's arm and telling it to "straighten up right now." I look away and finger my name tag on the top suitcase in my stack, then turn around and settle myself in a seat among the passengers headed for Houston, Texas. I cross my legs until the one on top falls asleep, then re-cross them the other way. I pick imaginary lent off of my jeans. I push my hair behind my ears, run my fingers through it, then push it back again. I rearrange my luggage stack. I root through one of my carry-ons looking for nothing. I turn on my cell phone. "Trust no one." Mulder set my welcome note when I got my new phone, about seven months ago. He said that it was something to remember, something to always be reminded of. I had never thought to change it. I check the battery - four little bars out of five - and go through my phone book. "Bullwinkle." Mulder set his cell phone number as number two, calling himself Bullwinkle, after Bullwinkle J. Moose. He said that I was Rocky in his phone. "Bullwinkle in Sweden." His home phone was number three - a joke about my love of "Monty Python and the Holy Grail." Moose bites can be quite nasty, you know. "TLG." Simple: The Lone Gunmen. He said that I should always keep their number handy in case I needed it. They were number four. "Richard Gere." He never got over the fact that Gary Shandling played him in that movie and was jealous of Skinner being played by Richard Gere. In Los Angeles, we sang "Hollywood Nights" and "LA Woman," going back and forth with the lines. I was drunk from the most expensive champagne that the most expensive restaurant had and he tucked a strand of hair behind my ear, leaning over the table and landing one of his lapels in his alfredo sauce. He told me he liked to hear my giggle, that he would have to get me drunk more often, and that he didn't think it was fair that they cast Tea Leoni as me, that I was much prettier than she is. Skinner was number five. "Mom." I had programmed that one myself. I rarely called her from my cell phone but figured that, in an emergency, if for some reason Mulder wasn't present and I wasn't conscious, the EMTs would at least be able to decipher one person to call. She was number six. A drop of something wet and warm lands on the screen and slides down over the numbers and finally to my thumb: a tear. I'm crying again. I don't know how he'd insinuated himself into my life, into every aspect of it. I didn't realize that he was everywhere, physically and emotionally. I sniff twice and wince - I need Tylenol. I turn my phone over and press the battery release button, counting to ten before I slide it back into the phone, erasing everything. I put it back in my bag and dig around some more for my plastic pill container. After finding it, I dump the contents into my hand and sort through the pills, looking for a pain reliever. Finding three Tylenol-3s, I funnel the rest back into the bottle, snap the lid shut, and shove it back into the bag, then swallow the pills dry. In about forty-five minutes, I'll be dead on my feet - the codeine in one of these things knocks me out; three will give me half a day of unconsciousness, which is just what I want right now. Mulder's allergic to codeine. It gives him migraines. I zip my bag harder than necessary, catching my finger in the zipper at the other end. I wince again, the pain throbbing in tandem with my head and heart, and suck on my finger, tasting blood. My face gets hot and I want to throw myself on the floor, kick my feet and pound my fists and scream and scream and scream, scream until I lose my voice. I hiccup, holding back tears, and jerk the zipper back open, fish my cell phone out of my bag again, turn it on, and dial the unfamiliar numbers, hesitating before pushing send. I push clear instead, then zip the bag again, put it on top of my stack, and wheel my metal cart over to a news stand, feeling very much like a bag lady pushing a baby carriage. When I pick up an Atlanta-Journal Constitution and stare at the front page, my blood has soaked into it. I read the headline, not knowing what it says, then put it back down and turn away. There are people milling around, businessmen in a hurry, desperate to make their flights, families relaxing and strolling about, taking in the sights and sounds of the airport, their children mesmerized by the bright lights and big planes. One catches my eye, her lilting British accent sounding strange on a child so young. She's tugging at her mother's hand, wanting a cinnamon roll. Her father is walking towards them, big white box, knives and forks in his hand. She jumps up and down - she can't be more than four - so excited about something so simple. She looks exactly like Emily and I wonder briefly if she's adopted. Her father hands her the white box and points them to a table where they sit and divide the cinnamon roll, the little girl getting the biggest part. Mother and Father talk while the girl makes a mess of the sticky icing, Mother telling her to be careful, not to get icing on her clothes. I just stand there and watch the happy little family through the film of tears covering my eyes. She smiles and laughs, her face and eyes brightening the way Emily's did when Mulder made his silly face. Despite myself, I smile, too, and continue to gape at them, making the rushing minions walk around me to get where they're going. The night that she died, Emily asked me where Mulder was. I had sent him away, told him that I wanted to be alone to watch my daughter die, hoping that he would stay against my wishes, knowing that I only told him to go to try and preserve my pride and strength. She asked me if he was going to come see her again, make another silly face. I told her that he was probably asleep back at his hotel, but that I could make a silly face for her if she wanted. Her face contorted in pain and her already protruding veins turned a little bluer and became more pronounced. I pushed the button on her morphine pump, increasing her dose and she smiled again, the medicine taking effect. She said that Mulder did it better because he looked silly anyway, he didn't really need to make a face. When she finally died, I called him at 3:30 in the morning. I apologized for waking him, but he claimed he wasn't asleep. My voice was shaking but I wasn't crying. I simply told him that her heart had stopped and I had asked the doctors not to try and resuscitate her. He said he would be there in ten minutes, but was there in three, wearing the same clothes he had been earlier, only a little more wrinkled. A nurse later told me that he had been in the lobby all night in case I needed him. He had asked her to let him know if Emily's condition changed. He kept his arm around me while the orderlies wheeled her down to the morgue, turned me towards him once they were gone, and told me it was okay to cry. I covered my face with my hands and sagged into his chest, his arms supporting me when I could no longer support myself. He stroked my back and whispered to me that she was better off, that she wasn't in pain anymore. I shook and hiccupped, but never shed a single tear, nodding when he asked a few minutes later if I was okay. An errant, world-weary traveler bumps into me, breaking me out of my reverie. He doesn't apologize and my cheeks turn scarlet and hot from embarrassment. The little girl is staring at me oddly, almost like she recognizes me but isn't sure from where, licking the icing from her fork and kicking her legs underneath the table. I look away from her and point my cart towards the nearest bank of seats and fall into one, shielding my eyes from the harsh lights. Everywhere I look, there's a memory and every one has Mulder playing a prominent role. I shake my head and rub my temples, suddenly dizzy. Sleep - I need sleep. I'm so tired, so, so tired. I want nothing more that to crawl into my big, soft, warm bed, pull the covers over my head, and not emerge for a century. Darkness tinges the edge of my vision and I shake my head again, willing it away. I'm delaying, putting off calling Ethan. He doesn't even know I'm here yet - I never called him to tell him my flight plans. He's at work and probably unable to get off in the middle of the day to take me home. I could take a cab to his house, assuming they have cabs in Atlanta, but it hits me suddenly that I don't even know where he lives, I don't even know his address. For all I know, Roswell could be two hours away in any direction. I wouldn't have the faintest idea what to tell the cab driver. Cell phone still clutched tightly between my trembling fingers, I dial the unfamiliar numbers again and finally push send. After a hesitation and a few clicks, it rings. And rings. And rings. Finally, "Minette." He sounds busy and I feel a twinge of guilt for interrupting his day. I raise my head slightly and feel dizzy again, moaning into the phone. "Hello?" He asks suspiciously. "E-an?" I slur out, hoping he recognizes my voice. "Dana?" "Mmm..." I rub my temples again, trying to push the pain away but only making it worse. "What's the matter?" "'M sick..." Hearing the cacophony of background noise, he asks, "Where are you?" "Airport..." "Oh. When's your flight?" "No...'m in A'lana..." "Already? Dana -" "E-an, 'm sick..." My voice is light, airy, almost a whisper, my words fading out at the end. "Dana, I'm kinda busy right now. You should've called." "'M sick!" I scream, my vision blurring and darkening again. The codeine is starting to take effect. I need him. Now. "Okay, okay. I'll see what I can do." He sounds disappointed, like CNN can't function without him for...however long it takes to get here, to Roswell, and back again. "E-an...'m sick..." I mumble again, in case he missed it the first hundred times. "I'm on my way, Dana, I'm walking out the door right now. Just hang on, okay?" "Hurry," I whine miserably, sounding exactly the way I feel, like a Kindergartner on her first day of school. "I will, I will. Twenty minutes, Dana." I whimper. "Okay..." "Okay." The phone clicks again as he hangs up. Pressing the end button, I dip my head between my knees and try to take deep breaths. If the room would stop spinning, I might not feel so nauseous. An eternity later, I feel a cool hand on my shoulder. "Dana? Are you all right?" Not raising my head from my knees, I shake it as best as I can, trying not to vomit or pass out. He kneels in front of me, tipping my head up to his. "Dana, I need you to get up. Can you stand up?" I shake again and he stands, then lifts me until I'm leaning against him, his arm around my waist holding me up. "Is all of this yours?" He gestures to the metal cart with the teetering stack of luggage beside me. I make some sort of affirmative grunt and he sighs, rearranges me in his arms, and then pushes the cart with the one not supporting me. "Dana, I need to you walk," he says, sounding annoyed and a little angry. I make another sound, then float through the twirling room, outside, and finally to his car. He opens the door and pushes me into the passenger's seat, slams the door after me, then loads the luggage into the trunk. When he slams that shut, I gag on bile and start sweating profusely. He finally gets in the car and starts the engine, the air conditioner blasting my face at full speed. I blindly reach out my hand to push the air away and he twists a knob, lessening the blizzard. "Now, what happened?" he asks, looking sharply at me. I loll my head against the seat. "Cold," is all I can manage before he puts the car in gear and swings quickly out of the parking space. Before we're even out of the lot, I've already lost consciousness. <><><><><><> So warm...so soft...so comfortable... The cotton sheets feel luxurious against my skin and I burrow into my little cocoon, take a deep breath, then relax and enjoy the task of just laying still and quiet in a big, empty bed. Big, empty bed? I open my eyes and push the covers off of my head, then look around in confusion. It's not my apartment, it's not Mulder's apartment, it's not a hospital room, and it's not a hotel room. Where the hell am I? And where the hell is Mulder? I look at the clock beside the bed, 2:09. There's a piece of paper lying beside it and I reach out for it, trying several times before finally grasping it and bringing it to my face. "Dana- I had to go back to work. Hope you're better. Should be back around seven. Make yourself at home. Love, Ethan." So I'm at Ethan's house. In Ethan's bed. When did I call Ethan? I lay back against the pillows and reread the note. "Hope you're better." Oh, the headache. And the pills. I must've fallen asleep...or something. My luggage is sitting in one corner, my clothes that I don't remember taking off are draped over the largest piece. In nothing but my bra and underwear, I'm cold, so I stand and sway, feeling all the blood rush out of my head, sit back down on the bed, take a few deep breaths, then stand again and wait for the room to stop spinning before collecting them and dressing. There's a long mirror standing in one corner of the bedroom, framed in deep, cherry wood, carved with an ornate, old-fashioned designs. It's tilted so that I can see myself from across the room, the glare from the afternoon sun distorting my face and chest. Beside the mirror is the bathroom door, partially closed. I walk over to the door, the plush, expensive carpet feeling like little massaging fingers against my feet, then push it open. The blinds above the largest Jacuzzi tub I've ever seen are open and I lean over it, closing them to block out the brightness. My head doesn't hurt as much as it did, but my body is weak, tired, like it used to be after a nosebleed and paralyzing cancer migraine. The tub is impossibly wide and deep, but I don't see any bubble bath sitting on the edge. In fact, there's a fine layer of dust covering the edges and I gather that this isn't Ethan's favorite way to bathe. There's a shower stall next to the tub, but I don't feel like making the effort of taking off the clothes that I just put on, drying myself, and redressing again. Instead, I turn towards the double vanity, only one of which is adorned with a toothbrush, paste, and deodorant. The other is rather dusty like the tub, so I assume that this one will be mine and turn on the water, wiping the dust away and waiting for the water to warm up. I splash some on my face and rinse my mouth, discovering that I'm actually thirsty enough to swallow the tepid, tasteless stuff. I pinch the skin of my arm between my fingers and it slowly slinks back into place - I'm dehydrated. Turning off the water, I almost look at myself in the mirror. Remembering what I saw the last time I studied myself - a pale, sick-looking, foreign face - I decide to avoid my reflection out of fear of what I'd see this time. Instead, I turn away, eager to explore the rest of the house. My house. Our house. I walk out the bedroom door and step into a large, airy hall, blinded by the light streaming in through the arching window high on the wall above the foyer. I squint and turn away, peaking into one bedroom, empty except for the barest of necessities. A big, high bed, a chest of drawers, a night stand, a mirror. This must be the guest bedroom. I crane my neck to look into the other bedroom across the hall. The walls are covered in pink and white stripped wallpaper, the furniture is white with pink edging, the bedspread and curtains white with pink flowers. Several stuffed animals sit on the bed in front of the pillows, each either white, pink, or a combination of the two. It looks like a room for a princess, so I assume that this one belongs to Emma. Feeling awkward about intruding into her personal space, I hesitantly step inside. The room exudes a comforting feeling, a warmth and safety that Ethan's bedroom - our bedroom - didn't. A white bookshelf in the corner is full of big, colorful children's books and I finger their spines, my eyes flitting over their titles. I slide one out of its home and gingerly sit on the bed, flipping through the pages, mesmerized by the simplicity of the language and story, the exaggeration of the illustrations. Emma must like to be read to before bed. Or maybe she's learning to read and Ethan sits with her while she struggles with the words, proud of herself when she masters another one. I close the book and place it beside me on the bed, then pick up a random stuffed animal: a white whale. Just like one I had when I was her age. My father brought it back for me after one of his many visits out into the ocean. He told me that his name was Ahab, so that I would always have one Ahab with me for when the other was away. I slept with that whale for twelve years, until I went to college, and I'm sure my mother still has it tucked away with the rest of my childhood somewhere in her basement. Remembering my father, his gentleness, how much he loved and missed me each time he would leave brings fresh tears to my eyes. I put Emma's whale down before I drip onto it, then stand and quickly walk out of the room, closing the door behind me. I wonder if Emma will ask me to read to her tonight, or to sit with her as she reads. I sniff and find the stairs, then descend them to explore the downstairs. A modest living room greets me at the bottom, some generic fruit and farm paintings hanging on opposite walls, deep green paint and matching striped wallpaper making the room seem small and foreboding. It appears that this room doesn't get much use, so I step through it and into the front foyer, a faux-wooden door with a fancy, frosted glass oval in the middle projecting prisms of light onto the polished hardwood. I look through the glass, remembering how I always wanted a pretty front door like this. Navy housing gave us cheap, torn screen doors, but I would see these kinds of doors in other houses and envied them. To the left, there's a large dining room, a long table with eight chairs around it and a china cabinet behind it displaying the delicate porcelain like fine jewelry. When I was little, my mother used to take Missy and me shopping with her while she picked out wedding gifts for distant relatives, always buying them a piece of china for their collection. She explained that, when we got married, we would get to pick out our own china patterns, both casual and formal. Missy was enthralled, picking out several different patterns each time we shopped, dreaming about how her own wedding would be. I was less than impressed, though, telling her that her patterns were ugly and wondering why you needed such expensive dishes that you wouldn't even use. My mother just laughed and said that I would understand one day, when it was me playing the bride. Mulder asked one time if we should be picking out china patterns and I couldn't imagine it - Mulder shopping for something as fragile and feminine as china. The kitchen is next, another fine layer of dust coating the counters and stove. I doubt this room gets much use either, except maybe the microwave. I open a cabinet and search for a glass, astounded at the number of crystal wine glasses that sit on the top shelves, out of reach of little fingers. I pick the simplest glass which is fancier than any I've ever owned and fill it with water from the tap, not bothering to fetch some ice to cool it down. On the refrigerator are several drawings done by a child. Some of a little girl with squiggly, yellow hair in what looks like a cheerleading uniform in one, a soccer uniform in another. One of the girl with a tall man with the same yellow hair, one of a stick-thin woman with a triangle skirt and light brown hair. All of the figures have red slashes across their faces, Emma's version of a smile. There's a report card, too, of all A's and S's, proclaiming that Emma is a bright, curious child, a pleasure to have in class. Through the kitchen is another table, this one small and round with only four chairs around it. Down a small hallway is a full bathroom and a study, a computer and several bookshelves lining the walls. A bulletin board is hung on one wall, pictures of Ethan shaking hands with important looking men in expensive suits pined haphazardly to it, an old picture of he and Emma at the beach tucked into one corner. On the other end of the second-table area is a living room, a large TV and entertainment system against one wall, a plush couch across from it. Three windows behind the couch overlook the green, fenced back yard, a child's swing set in the middle looking well used. This house is huge. And fancy. And expensive. I had never given it much thought before, but Ethan must make a lot of money working at CNN. I sip my water and set it on the coffee table in front of the couch, careful to place it right in the center of a coaster. Not knowing what else to do, not having anyone to talk to, I sit down, then lie down, on the couch. The air here is cool and the air conditioning has been on constantly since I awoke, so I pull the blanket down from the back and cover myself, arranging the pillow under my head and my hips between the crack of the cushions. I should probably call someone, just to let them know that I'm here and that I'm safe. My mother doesn't even know I've left yet and Mulder...Mulder's at work, I guess. Or maybe he's still at the airport, certain that, at any minute, I'll walk up behind him, tell him I'm sorry, that I was wrong, that I'm staying with him. My eyes burn with tears again, thinking of his face before I left him, his sad eyes, his pouty lips. He's probably worried about me. I should probably call him. After twenty minutes of trying to convince myself, I slip into a light sleep, shivering under the thin blanket. <><><><><><> I awake to little fingers carefully kneading my shoulder. There's a shadow leaning over me and then a child's whisper, "Daddy, she's asleep." Ethan says in a low, gentle voice, walking towards us, "Yeah, she's sick, Em. Why don't we let her sleep for a few more minutes and surprise her with dinner, okay?" "Okay," Emma whispers back and the shadow disappears, little feet padding across the carpet then squeaking across the linoleum of the kitchen. I sigh, then adjust myself, and decide to let them surprise me as they'd planned. When I hear Emma pound up the steps, I pinch the skin of my arm underneath the blanket, checking my dehydration. One sip of water doesn't make up for days of poor nourishment, and my skin slowly returns to its rightful place, itching and stretching as it does. I rub the area and hear Ethan approach the couch. He kneels down beside me as I flutter my eyes open, surprised at the darkness that's taken up residence since this afternoon. He brushes my hair away from my face, leaning in to kiss me softly on my lips. "Hey," he whispers, pulling back and grinning at my laziness. "Hey," I try and whisper back, but it doesn't make it out. I cough and clear my throat, Ethan hands me the water, and I take a long gulp, knowing I should drink slowly but not caring. "You feelin' better?" "Yeah," I finally manage in half a voice. "What happened?" He asks, taking the water from me and setting it back on the table, rising to sit beside me. "I don't know. I had a headache..." "I thought you said you'd call." I sit up, pull the covers tightly around me, and nod sadly. "I know. I'm sorry." "What's wrong?" I look up at him, his soft eyes and the little lines around them, his slight grin, his concerned expression. Despite my mother's advice, I should tell him what happened with Mulder, why I felt that I had to get away now if I was ever to get away. How I had been having second thoughts about this whole moving a thousand miles away and getting married immediately thing, having second thoughts about why I'm doing it and if I really want to do it, having second thoughts about who I really love and how I really love him. No, not second thoughts, more like fifth, sixth, eightieth thoughts. "Nothing," I finally say after he's forgotten what he asked. "What do you feel like you could eat?" he asks, closing the blinds on the windows behind us. I can't remember the last time I've actually had a decent meal, can't even remember the last time I ate anything. My stomach is empty and rolling, but I'm just not hungry. "I don't know." "Emma wants pizza, but Emma always wants pizza." He grins. "Pizza's fine," I say, nodding, not looking forward to greasy cheese and soggy crust. "Good, I'll order it. Any topping preferences?" "Whatever Emma likes." He wrinkles his nose, standing. "You might want to rethink that." Emma comes back down the stairs and navigates her way into the living room as Ethan bends down to kiss me once again, harder, longer, more insistent this time. "I'm glad you're here," he whispers, then notices Emma standing behind him, looking perplexed. "Look who's awake, Em," he says cheerily. "Come say hi." She stays where she is, studies the floor, and insincerely says, "Hi." "Hi, Emma," I say back, feeling awkward and out of place. Ethan looks back and forth between us, then decides it's time to change the subject again. He claps his hands together once, asks Emma to set the table, then turns to me and says, "You rest, okay?" Not waiting for an answer, he turns and disappears into the kitchen, leaving me alone in the living room. It looks like Emma's less than excited that I'm here, unlike her father. She and I have more and more in common every day. <><><><><><> The pizza was greasy and soggy, as I'd suspected, and my stomach punished me for eating something so heavy so soon after not eating anything. It rolled and churned, making me lean over the toilet in the master bathroom for nearly an hour before deciding that no, it wouldn't send the pizza back after all. Ethan came in once, asked if I was okay, to which I, with my gray skin, cold sweat, and trembling frame, replied, yes, why wouldn't I be? He laughed, thinking I was kidding, but wetting a washcloth for me and pressing it against the back of my neck to try and feel useful. The water was cold, of course, and only made me shiver harder. He then suggested that maybe I'd like a bath, if I didn't mind Emma's kid-scented bubble bath. He ran the water, poured the bubble bath, and shut the door before he left. I promptly drained half the water, refilling it with water that turned my skin a frighteningly bright red, and added more bubble bath when I was finally able to drag myself over to the tub, divest myself of clothes, and climb in. Either I fell asleep again or passed out, but when I can process thoughts again, the water is freezing, the bubbles are gone, and my skin is tinged blue. Teeth chattering, I climb out and dry off, leaving the water and slowly opening the door. The bedroom is dark and the door is closed, so I hastily get into bed, pulling the covers around me in a futile attempt to get warm. A few minutes later, the door opens and Ethan walks in, flips on the light, and heads towards the bathroom, actually standing in the doorway before he notices me and tiredly asks, "Feel better?" Yes, Ethan, I feel much better now that I'm hypothermic, now get in this bed and get me warm, dammit! I shake my head against the pillows, which are wet from my hair. He continues into the bathroom and I hear water gurgling as the tub drains. A few minutes later, he comes out and sits beside me on the bed. "You're freezing," he declares and I nod. Obviously. "Make me warm," I beg, sounding much more seductive than I really feel. He laughs and bends to kiss me on the forehead, the only part of me that's exposed. "Later. I have work to do." I cover the rest of my head and turn over, not answering. Can't work wait just a few minutes before I get frostbite? I guess not. He stands and I hear the door close after he walks out, leaving me alone and cold, empty and lonely. When I peak my head out into the cool air, the clock says that it's nearly two hours later than it was the last time I looked, but still not midnight, yet. I wonder what time Ethan will finally come to bed, though I'm no longer in danger of losing any toes. I'm sleepy and bored, but I'm tired of laying in this bed all by myself. My mother doesn't even know I'm here, Goddamn it. Maybe I should call her to pass the time. There's a phone beside the bed so I pick it up, dialing six out of eleven numbers before I hang up, then dial eleven other numbers. "Hi, this is Fox Mulder, leave a message," is said in a rush, like he had better things to be doing when he recorded that message five years ago. And just where is he at 11:30 at night? He should be camped out on his couch, keeping vigil against the nightmares and demons that haunt him. He should answer his phone. He should be here. Maybe he's screening, but he's got caller ID. Maybe he fell asleep, but he's a very light sleeper. The phone would wake him. Maybe he's lying cold and stiff in a morgue somewhere, waiting for someone to claim his body and grieve his loss. "Mulder, it's me," I say softly, thinking that maybe the mental telepathy that he's so fond of will say the rest. No, I didn't think it really existed. "I'm...I'm here." And I miss you and I'm sorry that I hurt you and where are you and I'm cold and scared and lonely and where are you? "I'm fine." And I'm sick and I miss you and where are you and are you mad at me and where are you? "Call me when you get this...on my cell." WHERE ARE YOU WHY AREN'T YOU ANSWERING ME WHY AREN'T YOU HERE? I hang up the phone and let my arm drop from the table to dangle above the floor, the blood tingling in my fingers the only thing that I can feel other than fear and sadness. What if he needs me? What if he's lying in a hospital unconscious and without ID? What if he's alone somewhere, injured and hurting and wishing someone would come and rescue him? What if he's lying in his big, empty bed watching the clock tick eternity away, cold and afraid and alone and missing me? What if his hand is clutching the phone, wanting to call me but afraid to, afraid that I'll tell him to leave me alone, to never call again, to get out of my life? Don't be afraid, Mulder. I'm here. Please, don't be afraid. <><><><><><> The bed sinks and shifts as someone climbs in, scooting over to me and spooning up behind me. "What did you have in mind, Dana?" He whispers against my neck, kissing slowly down over my collar bone and trying to get me to turn over. I forgot - I'd gone to bed nude, too cold to try and find pajamas, thinking Ethan would be right behind me. The clock says 2:13 a.m., now, and my eyes are sticky from tears, my body sore from huddling and shivering. I shake my head, telling him no, I didn't have anything in mind, go to sleep. He doesn't take the hint. He's nude, too, his straining erection nudging the tops of my thighs. I shift away and his arms pull me back against him, his hips grinding against me. "Ethan," I finally whisper, pushing his hands away from my breasts. "What?" He sucks at my earlobe, then behind it, still not getting it. "You woke me up...I don't feel well." My voice is strong, betraying my pleas, but it works nonetheless. "Okay," he says, nuzzling my cheek. "Tomorrow." I should remind him that, technically, tomorrow is twenty-two hours away and he probably doesn't want to wait that long, but my pounding heart and rush of adrenaline have faded, leaving me more exhausted than before. He curls his legs around mine, relaxes his arms a little, and within minutes, his breathing is deep and even: he's asleep. I'm not, though. I'm wide awake, my eyes huge and alert in the blackness of the bedroom. They flit between the clock and the phone, willing one to make some noise to break the silence and stillness. Neither does. Mulder doesn't call and hot tears slip down the bridge of my nose and disappear into my hair as the darkness slowly becomes daylight. <><><><><><> About six thirty, I realize that I'm floating through that haze of semi-consciousness, not really asleep, not really awake. Sometimes, I feel paralyzed. Sometimes, I hear Mulder calling my name, begging me to help him, to come back to him. He told me once that many reports of alien abduction are actually cases of sleep paralysis. When you wake up too quickly, or fall asleep too slowly, cycling in and out of deep sleep, your brain's natural dream paralysis doesn't know not be active, hence the feeling of paralysis while you're awake. He said that it's also common to experience the feeling of a presence in the room or to hear familiar people calling you when, in reality, no one is speaking. I don't remember feeling those things during my abduction. I remember feeling heavy and sleepy, but not that someone was calling out to me, not that I was paralyzed. I clutch my pillow in my fist, taking deep breaths as another paralyzation fit passes, remembering being awake and seeing men hovering over me, but too tired and afraid to move, to scream, to try and fight back. Something shifts behind me, making me jump, misty visions of tall men in dark suits and drills and pumps running through my head. It tightens its arms around me and pulls me closer, then nuzzles the tender spot behind my ear, breathing against me. "Morning," it whispers. I don't answer, just swallow thickly. I feel nauseous, sweaty, feverish. "This is nice." Ethan. It's Ethan. He kisses across the back of my neck and around to my shoulder. "I missed this." He slides his one leg on top of mine, then down and between them, trying to pry mine apart. His erection makes its way between my thighs and when it brushes my groin, I suck in a deep breath and choke back the bile that rises in my throat. "Ethan," I whisper, shifting my hips away from his. "What?" He asks, pulling me back against him. "No," I say, louder than necessary. He loosens his arms around me and lets me slide across the bed and away from him, then stands up and walks into the bathroom. A few minutes later, I hear the shower come on and I release a nervous breath, glad to be away from him, if only for a few minutes. He emerges, hair wet and chin freshly shaven, dresses quickly, and sits beside me on the bed as he works on knotting his tie. "You want some coffee?" He asks, leaning down to kiss me. I shake my head, trying to disappear into the covers. "How 'bout some breakfast?" Another shake. He sighs, clearly disappointed. "Don't sleep too late," he gently commands before standing and leaving the bedroom, closing the door behind him. I lay still for another few minutes feeling embarrassed and shaky, my migraine from yesterday making an encore appearance. When I can't hold back the vomit anymore, I stand on wobbly legs and make my way to the toilet, kneeling there for ten minutes before I'm able to drag myself into the still-damp shower and scrub off the top few layers of my skin. It feels so good to be clean again, fresh and pretty. I keep the lights off as I dress in my most oversized pajamas and hold tightly to the rail as I descend the stairs. Ethan's already got coffee going, although its sweet odor only makes my head pound harder, my stomach feeling rebellious again. I stagger through the kitchen and to the four-chaired table where he's sitting, engrossed in a paper. He puts it down long enough to lean in and kiss me, returning it to its position in front of his face before saying, "You look pale. You're not sick again, are you?" I rub my temples and stare daggers through the paper. "No. I'm fine." He stands abruptly, pouring the remainder of his coffee down the sink. "I don't have to be to work until ten today, but I need to go in early anyway. We just got a new intern and I need to start training him." I nod, keeping my head down against the sunlight spilling in through the French doors. "I thought that Emma could stay here with you today. She usually stays with one of her friends down the street, but since you'll be here..." "She doesn't like me, Ethan," I whisper into the table. He walks back over to me, rubbing my shoulders lightly. "She just has to get to know you. And you have to get to know her. I told you, she's a little shy sometimes." "Still, she'd have much more fun with her friend than with me. And I really don't feel well -" "You have to get to know each other eventually, Dana." I rub my eyes, wanting nothing more than to crawl back into bed and hibernate for a century. "I know. But maybe it's too soon. I don't think you should push her." He drops his hands from my shoulders and picks up the suit coat that's draped over the chair he recently vacated. "Look, I don't have time to discuss this. We can talk about it later, but one day isn't going to kill you or her, okay?" He kisses me on the cheek once more, saying against my skin, "I was thinking Labor Day weekend," grinning smugly. I turn to face him. "What about it?" "The wedding. You haven't forgotten already, have you?" Yes. "No." "What do you think?" I think we need more time. "It's fine." "Good. We may have to put off the honeymoon, though. I don't know that I could get the time off." I shudder involuntarily, thinking of just me and him and a big hotel room, isolated from the world. He bounds up the stairs, to kiss Emma good-bye, I guess, then comes back down, talking a mile a minute. "I gotta go. Traffic in Atlanta is hell. I'll be home around seven, okay? You and Emma do something fun today," and is out the door before I can even raise my leaden eyelids and say, "Bye," to the empty room. <><><><><><> It's eight thirty. He has to be there at nine. He's usually there by seven forty five. Why isn't he answering his phone? They wouldn't have already locked him out of his office. He would have to have another meeting with OPC for his official reassignment and they would give him time to pack and move his things before disconnecting this phone number and giving him a new one to go with his new phone and desk and partner. So why isn't he answering? His voice mail isn't picking up either. Okay, I'll just try his cell phone. After six rings, I'm informed that the cellular customer I'm trying to reach is unavailable. I try his office again, still not getting an answer. Out of desperation, I call his apartment, hanging up after his voice asks me to leave a message but before the beep. I've already left him one message, he'll call when he has time. Mulder's always called, whether he's had time or not. He's always made time for me, made a place in his life for me. <><><><><><> After a short nap, my head and stomach are feeling remarkably better, so I get up and, after determining that the Princess is still sleeping upstairs, pick up the paper that Ethan discarded on the kitchen table as he left for work. I've probably read every single word in this paper - even the Sports section - waiting for Emma to wake up and discover that she's here all alone with me. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution contains an interesting section called "The Vent," which is what I'm focusing on now. I'm not sure what it is, exactly, but it's hilarious. Mulder would like this, I think, and I actually smile, my tight skin burning as it stretches to accommodate the foreign gesture. Little feet sound against the stairs and I look up, waiting for Emma to wander into the kitchen, trying to figure out what to say when she gets here. Start with the obvious. "Good morning, Emma," I say brightly, stretching my skin again with a bigger smile. She's in her pajamas, too, her long hair tangled from sleep. Starring at me as if she doesn't recognize me, she runs her tiny fingers nervously through her hair, catching several knots in the process. "Are you hungry? Would you like some breakfast?" It's almost eleven thirty. She probably wants lunch. Hesitating, then staring at the floor, she shakes her head. Okay, I'm out of ideas. I have no clue how to handle this situation. I stare at her, staring at the floor, and the silence makes me nervous. "Can we go to the pool today?" she asks suddenly, thankfully saving me from having to start any other conversation. "Where is the pool?" "Down the road." "Is it in the subdivision?" She nods, not looking up. "Okay, I guess we can go later." That was apparently the right answer, as she looks up and smiles, her blue eyes brightening. "Do you know how to swim?" "Well, I haven't been in a long time, but I used to. Maybe you could help me." "Okay." "Okay." Conversation apparently over, she turns quickly and runs back up the stairs, emerging a few minutes later in a bathing suit, cotton shorts, and little plastic flip-flops with big pink flowers on them. She's carrying a brush and walks up to me, looking very serious as she asks, "Can you put my hair up?" "Sure." She turns around and hands me the brush. As gently as I can, I draw it through her hair, wincing as I hit a tangle, hoping she won't run away screaming. Hair up in a crooked pony-tail, she turns around and takes the brush from me and asks another question. "What are we having for lunch?" I lean down to look into her eyes. "What would you like?" She shrugs her shoulders. "You can't wear that to the pool," she sternly informs me, changing the subject and looking suspiciously at my pajamas. I look down self-consciously. "I know. I'll change before we go. In fact, I'll go change right now while you decide what you want for lunch, okay?" "Okay." Okay - that must be the word of the day. Rooting through my luggage, I remember that I haven't owned a bathing suit in at least ten years. I just won't go swimming, then. Come hell or high water, I'm taking Emma to that pool. When I return downstairs in blue jean shorts and a tank top, Emma has turned on the television in the living room, mesmerized by a cartoon. Hearing me approach behind her, she declares from over her shoulder, "I want peanut butter and strawberry jelly." Taken off guard by her almost-command, I stammer, then slowly say, "All right. Would you like to help me make it?" She doesn't seem to hear me, or maybe she's ignoring me. Okay. If Emma wants a peanut butter and strawberry jelly sandwich, Emma will get a peanut butter and strawberry jelly sandwich. She eats in silence, only speaking once to ask if I'm eating. No, I'm not. Dana doesn't feel like a peanut butter and strawberry jelly sandwich. Am I Dana? Miss Dana? Mom? Evil Stepmother? I'll have to ask Ethan. Thirty minutes after Emma's finished, we start our surprisingly short walk down to the pool slash clubhouse slash tennis courts. The other houses in the neighborhood are as big and fancy as Ethan's - ours - and I idly wonder just how much money he makes at CNN and how much this house cost him. Before we left the house, Emma instructed me on how to work the alarm system "to keep the bad guys away." Maybe I should tell her that I kept bad guys away for a living, that alarm systems rarely present anything more than a small challenge to a bad guy if he really wants access to your house. I gathered sunscreen and two bottled waters I found in the refrigerator into Emma's beach bag that matched her bathing suit, tucking my cell phone into the corner, checking for the five hundredth time that it was on and charged for when Mulder called, before arming the system and closing the door, running to catch up with an eager, excited Emma and our day at the pool. <><><><><><> As soon as we walked through the gate, two little girls Emma's age ran up to her, giggling and taking her back to the pool with them. I should have called after her, told her to be careful and that I would be sitting in one of the lounge chairs to the side, but I didn't. Feeling completely inept, I just let her go and sat down at the end of one of the chairs, dug the sunscreen out of my bag, and started slathering myself with it. Damn, it's hot here. I watch Emma and her two friends practice diving off the side of the pool, play Marco Polo, having the time of their little lives in silence. Missy, Bill, and Chaz had always wanted a pool which, or course, we couldn't have. I was more content to lounge in a warm, private bathtub all day than expose myself to the dirty, freezing water of a concrete hole in the ground. Squinting my eyes, I watch two women headed towards me, talking and laughing at the girls in the pool. One of them speaks, looking down at me through her designer sunglasses. "Are you Dana?" she asks in a false Southern drawl, the other appraising me accusingly. How these women know who I am, I have no idea, but they look harmless enough, so I say, "Yes," sounding more like I'm unsure myself. The silent appraiser sits down on the chair beside me, extending a delicate hand with red manicured nails that match her bathing suit perfectly. "I'm Carrie, Hollie's mom." I nod, wondering who Hollie is, and take her limp hand, shaking lightly. "Ethan's told us so much about you!" The designer sunglasses woman declares. "I'm Sonya, Abigail and Amelia's mom." "It's nice to meet you," I say, hoping that I don't sound too insincere. Her head is right in front of the sun, and I feel rude for not looking at her. "Well, we didn't know you'd be here so soon. We were planning a surprise welcome to the neighborhood party for you," Carrie says. "Oh, well -" "Maybe we can just take you and Ethan out to dinner, get one of the older girls to watch the kids." I look down, rubbing the sunscreen further into my skin. "What a cute pair of shoes!" Sonya sticks her foot beside mine, enthralled that they look to be the same size. "Maybe I can borrow them sometime. They'd look great with this new dress I got last week." "The purple one with the white flowers?" Carrie asks. Sonya nods and turns towards the pool. "Abby, let's not run, sweetie," she femininely yells, the girl named Abby dutifully slows to a walk, flashing a huge grin. "So, Ethan says you two are getting married," she sits down beside Carrie and crosses her tiny, perfectly bronzed legs, adjusting her sunglasses. "Um, yes, we are." "It's so romantic - he told us the whole story!" "Whole story?" I ask Carrie, who is beaming and batting her too- long eyelashes. "Yeah, about how y'all were engaged all those years ago and then y'all called off the wedding and went your separate ways and how y'all met again and decided that you couldn't live without each other." Oh. That whole story that can be condensed into one cluttered, run-on sentence. I smile tightly and look down again. I never said that I couldn't live without him. "He said you were an FBI agent!" "Yes, I was." It sounds foreign to speak of that in the past tense, but it's true. I'm no longer an FBI agent. "How exciting," Carrie says, gazing through me wistfully. "Yes, it was," I answer softly. Peaking into the bag, I check to see if my cell phone is still there and will it to ring, even if it's just a wrong number. I can lie and say it's an emergency, that I have to go and escape these women. Call, Mulder. Dammit, where are you? Call! <><><><><><> With Emma exhausted and asleep on the couch, I decide to turn on the computer and check my email. If Mulder's away from his phones - all three of them - maybe he'll check his mail. "Mulder- I don't know if you've gotten my message, but I'm here. Everything's fine." Well, not fine exactly. Not wonderful but certainly not horrible. "Call me at 770-555-2483 or on my cell phone, or just email me. -Scully" Okay, he's bound to read that. He has to read that. He'll call. Maybe he's on a case or something and just hasn't been able to check his messages at home or answer his phone at work. It still doesn't explain why he isn't answering his cell phone, though but he'll check his email...I hope. I stare at the computer after sending the mail, thinking that maybe he'll respond instantly. After twenty minutes, my stomach announces that it's empty and hungry and I give up, going into the kitchen, wondering if Ethan has any actual food in this house or if he and Emma just order something every night. In the pantry, there are a few cans of spaghetti-O's and another jar of peanut butter. The frigde is full of leftover Chinese and pizza, but nothing that looks appetizing. I learned today that Carrie, Jason's wife, lives two doors down and Sonya, Spencer's wife, lives behind us. I guess I could do what people on 60's sitcoms do in these kinds of situations, go borrow something to cook dinner with, but I'm not feeling overly friendly right now. I listened to them prattle back and forth about fashion and talk shows and child rearing for nearly three hours before the girls came to announce that they were tired and wanted to go home. Carrie invited Ethan and me for dinner tomorrow, much to Sonya's disgust, who invited us for Sunday brunch. I nodded and said I'd have to talk to Ethan and they said they looked forward to having us over, apparently ignoring my statement. For lack of anything better to do, I sit down at the kitchen table and rub my eyes and temples, trying not to go check my email. It's not working, and after five minutes, I check again. Nothing. Maybe he's away from his computer - in a meeting, maybe. Needing something to occupy me, I decide that I need to start looking for a job. I search the Internet for Emory's website, looking through their job posting. They need a professor for a few afternoon classes being offered this fall and I need something to do - this is only my second day here and I'm already bored to tears. I pull up my resume and change a few things, adding my ten years at the FBI to my employment history, type a cover letter, then, spying a fax machine in the corner, fax all of it to them. The web site said that it may be a month before I hear anything - I don't know if I can stand this a month. Bored again, I decide to call Ethan at work, just to see what he's doing. He doesn't answer, either, so I call Mulder's cell phone again, then check my email again. Nothing. I'm starting to wonder if something really is wrong, if he really may be injured or unconscious and needing me. No, someone would call. I'm still his emergency contact and his personal physician, someone would have to call me. <><><><><><> I'm sitting at the kitchen table when Ethan arrives at 7:38. He looks exhausted but kisses me on the cheek and asks how my day was. "Fine," I say. "Emma and I went to the pool." He rolls his eyes. "Lucky you." "And I met Carrie and Sonya." "Really? They're gonna be so disappointed that you ruined their party plans." "I hate surprises," I remind him, in case he's forgotten. He nods and sticks his head in the refrigerator, looking for something to drink. "I was gonna cook something, but you don't have any food in this house, Ethan." "You could've gone to the store." "I don't have a car. And I don't know where anything is," I remind him. "Emma could tell you, and there's a car in the garage." "There is?" "Yeah, a Suburban. We use it for soccer games and cheernastics competitions." He looks at me like I'm stupid for not noticing, then approaches me and leans down to whisper in my ear. "I'm sorry. I forgot to tell you. You're welcome to drive it anywhere you want." I lean back against him, wondering what the hell cheernastics is. "Good, cause I may have a job interview soon." He stands abruptly, then walks around the table to sit beside me. "A job interview?" he asks incredulously. "Yeah, at Emory. They need an associate medical professor. I faxed them my resume today." He shakes his head, slowly, not understanding. "Dana -" "What?" He takes a few slow, measured breaths. "Dana, you don't have to work." I gape at him. "What do you mean?" He scoots his chair closer to mine. "You don't need to work. We don't need the money." I look around the house and say flippantly, "Obviously." "No, I'm serious. You don't need to work." "I know I don't need to, Ethan. I want to. You can't expect me to sit around this house all day and do nothing." He just stares at me, his brow drawn and serious. "You can't really expect me not to work," I repeat, my voice going up a few octaves. He rubs his eyes like he's speaking to a child. "What about Emma?" "What about Emma?" "Dana," he takes another deep breath, closing his eyes briefly. "I don't like having neighbors watch her all the time." I just stare at him, perplexed. "I think it would be best for her if you stayed home." I don't respond. "Don't you?" He finally asks, reaching out for my hand. "What about when she goes back to school?" He sighs and looks away. "Listen, I've had a long, stressful day and I don't need this right now." He stands up and walks away, saying, "We'll talk about this later, okay?" No. Not okay. Not okay at all. I stare out at the increasing darkness on the other side of the French doors, listening as he gently wakes Emma and asks her what she wants to eat. A few minutes later, he comes back to the kitchen, carrying his sleepy little girl and announces, "We're going to get McDonald's," walking out without even asking what he can bring me. Waiting for Ethan's Lexus to pull out of the garage and the soft hum of the engine to fade down the street, I stand and walk back into the study, checking my email once again. Still nothing. I check the phone to see if it has a dial tone. It does. I check my cell phone to see if it's on and the battery is still charged. It is. Tears burning my eyes, I slowly walk up the stairs, get ready for bed, and crawl between the sheets, clutching my cell phone against my chest and praying that Mulder is safe and healthy, that I'll be able to talk to him soon. <><><>End Part 1<><><> <><><>Begin Part 2<><><> All of my things arrived today - boxes and boxes of memories and nostalgic possessions. When the movers rang the door bell and told me that they had items to deliver, I cocked my head at them and didn't reach for the proffered clipboard to sign my receipt. The heavyset, leering man asked if I was Dana Scully, to which I replied, yes, then he asked if I hadn't recently moved from Washington, DC, if I shouldn't be expecting them. After a moment's hesitation, I finally nodded and let them in, watching in amazement as they continued to haul the boxes from the truck to the downstairs foyer. I wasn't aware that I had so much stuff. I immediately employed Emma to help me unpack. Her job was to push the boxes into relative corners of the foyer based on what their outside labels said - pointless, really, but it made me feel good to have her involved with a project of mine. Clothes were pushed to the foot of the stairs. Things labeled fragile, most likely decorations and things that would only gather dust, were, for now, relegated to the far corner in the dining room. Books and files were pushed into the study, where I would have to organize them before putting them away on the bookshelves and in the filing cabinets. Leaving Emma to rest in front of her afternoon cartoons, I trudged up and down the stairs, lugging boxes with me. One whole wall of the large, walk-in closet in the master bedroom was bare, so I began stripping the tape off of the boxes, taking out the clothes, and hanging them on hangers or placing them on shelves. As I was packing the morning that I left, I'd simply opened drawers, grabbed armfuls of clothing, and dropped them into boxes, not noticing what I'd packed as I'd sealed them. While I unpack, however, I discover that I've brought three articles of Mulder's clothing with me. After our longer cases, where we were living in hotels for weeks at a time, we would sometimes take a piece of clothing home that wasn't ours, realizing as we loaded the washing machine that the maroon boxer briefs or lacy Victoria's Secret lingerie didn't belong to us. We would wash them anyway, calling the other to tell them of the mix up and promising them their clothing the next time that they came over to the other's apartment. Sometimes, though, we simply forgot, and the boxer briefs or lingerie would be stuck in a random drawer and covered over with our own clothing. For some reason, the thought of a pair of Mulder's maroon boxer briefs being in the same drawer as my lingerie makes me blush slightly, and I hide them under a thick winter sweater that I don't think I've ever worn. Frequently, when I'd spend the night with him, I'd ask to sleep in one of his T-shirts, claiming that they were cooler and more comfortable than my pajama sets. He would always grin at me, feigning annoyance at my desire to constantly borrow his clothes, but he would always come up with a clean, soft as silk undershirt or that day's still-crisp work shirt for me to wear. The next morning, I'd pack it with my things and tell him that I'd wash it and return it, but often never did. He'd never said anything about missing them and I never offered them back. When I was sick, once, I'd changed into one of his blue oxfords that hung to my knees and covered my wrists with the sleeves rolled up. It somehow brought me comfort, knowing that this shirt that had once been against his skin was now against mine. It had made me feel a little less lonely. That day, I'd stayed out of work, and he'd brought me lunch. When I'd opened the door to let him in, he grinned and said that I looked good in his clothes. A little embarrassed at him catching me in one of my indulgences, I'd changed immediately, much to his disappointment. I hold the shirt to my face, inhaling deeply, pretending I can still smell his aftershave and unique scent on the fabric. He hasn't worn it in years, but he always looked good in blue. I fold it carefully, the way a department store clerk would fold the shirts for a display, then place it neatly in an empty drawer along with my pajamas. Oddest of the stowaways is a pair of his too-big-for-him plaid pajama pants. I hold them in my hands and wrack my brain, trying to remember how I acquired these, but I can't remember and that disturbs me. I place them on top of his blue shirt and close the drawer harder than necessary. I have a complete Mulder outfit, even if it doesn't match. True to my plan, the luggage with my suits is shoved into the back of the closet. I'll need one when I go on my interview at Emory, but for now, they don't fit with the blue jean shorts and tank tops I've been living in since I've arrived. Clothes finished, I descend the stairs and peak in on Emma, still engrossed in the television, then start in on the boxes in the dining room. My hodgepodge decor doesn't mix well with Ethan's carefully planned and immaculately placed themes and decoration, so I just reseal the boxes and carry them upstairs, putting them in front of my suits and behind my tennis shoes. Finally withdrawing my nameplate from my carry-on bag, I place it on the table next to my side of the bed. Dana K. Scully. I wonder what Ethan will think of my addition to our bedroom, how he feels about Mulder giving me a gift that he knows I won't be able to use for very long. Not taking Ethan's name was not an option I considered. Maybe Mulder thought that I'd keep my own instead, my maiden name being a sign of my independence and cautious rebellion. Deciding that Ethan wouldn't like it either way, I open the empty drawer and place it inside, then slowly close it. I wonder where Mulder is right now, what he's thinking, if he's thinking about me, wondering if I'll ever return to him one day. I pick up the phone and dial his cell phone, but his voice mail picks up instead of him. "Mulder, it's me. I don't know if you've gotten my messages, but please call me when you get this." I tried not to sound too desperate, knowing that, in all likelihood, the BSU was so thrilled to have him back that they sent him out in the field as soon as he'd been reassigned. He was probably just too busy to make small talk with me and would call when he returned, emotionally drained and physically exhausted. He would tell me of all the horrors of profiling and how this latest case had reminded him of Samantha. He would say over and over how much he hated profiling, hated what it did to him, hated its lingering effects - the nightmares, the unexpected cold-sweats, the jumps and starts when someone unfamiliar spoke to him. I hate the idea of him profiling, too. I'm always afraid that, one day, he'll follow the criminals he's chasing so far into the dark abyss that I'll never get him back. So far, though, on the few occasions I'd been with him while he was profiling, I'd always been able to call him back to me, back to safety and sanity, with a cool hand on his forehead, a soothing voice, and strong arms to hold him. I wonder if that will work through a phone line connecting us a thousand miles apart. He thinks that he'll wither and die without me, and I dial his office phone, praying that it's not true. Still no answer. I think of calling Skinner, but then I'd have to explain to him why I'm not with Mulder and why I'm worried about him. There's no need to involve Skinner in this and, if Mulder is already back at the BSU, he won't be under Skinner's supervision anyway. Placing the phone back in its cradle, I switch out the light and slowly walk down the stairs, hearing the garish cartoons entertaining Emma. It's final, now; it's real. My life is here now, stuffed into boxes and shoved into dark corners of the closet. My apartment, my independent life is gone. Intellectually, I had known that I was leaving for good when I got on that plane. Emotionally, though, it still seemed that I would be returning, not feeling like I had cut all my ties and wrapped up all my loose ends in DC. But now that all of me is here, however compact and remote, it feels real. It feels irreversible. It feels final. Well, a part of me is still somewhere out there, aching for me to come back to him. <><><><><><> Depressed and tired of watching Emma drown in the TV, I'd decided that we'd make a trip to the grocery store. First rule of living with children: never trust their sense of direction. We'd driven in circles for nearly fifteen minutes before Emma finally admitted that she didn't know how to get the grocery store. Frantic and thinking I was lost, I tried to retrace our route, blessedly arriving at a grocery store, where I'd learned my second rule of living with children: never tell them that they can pick out whatever kind of food they want. Finally, we'd arrived home at nearly six and I fixed Emma a box of macaroni and cheese, which she ate with a vigor I couldn't imagine anyone possessing for dried noodles in the shape of animals and powered cheese-sauce. I'd sent her upstairs to her room after that and started preparing the elaborate meal I'd planned for Ethan when he got home from work. My lasagna hadn't turned out bad, much to my surprise, and the wine was poured in glasses, the dining room table set for just the two of us. I was lighting the candles as the phone rang and I nearly dropped the match in the wine trying to rush to answer it. Finally, Mulder's calling me back. Or maybe someone's calling on his behalf, if he's injured and needs me. A million different, horrific thoughts swirled through my head as I took a deep breath and answered the phone. "Dana, it's me," Ethan says, sounding exhausted. Oh, it's Ethan. "Hey," I say, trying to sound cheery, like I missed him and am thrilled that he's calling. "I'm gonna be a little late tonight. It may be eight or nine before I get home." "Oh," I exhale, glancing at all of my hard work from this afternoon. "Is everything okay?" he asks, obviously distracted by something. "Yeah, I just...I fixed us dinner." He takes a deep breath. "You did?" He sounds surprised. "Yeah, but that's okay. It'll keep, I guess." "Dana, I'm sorry." "It's okay. You can't help it." I try and keep the disappointment out of my voice. "I'll try and hurry, okay? You eat, though, don't wait for me." "Okay," I say, already pouring out the wine and turning on the oven, keeping the lasagna warm for him when he gets home. "I'll see you later." "Okay," I repeat, blowing out the candles. He hangs up without saying goodbye and I let the phone fall from my fingers and against the counter, turn off the light in the kitchen, and walk up the stairs. Just before I turn off the lamp beside the bed, I call Mulder's apartment again and leave another message, asking him to call me as soon as possible. Then, I roll over and face the window, waiting for the headlights of Ethan's car to shine through the blinds, announcing his arrival. At eleven, I roll back towards the wall and fall asleep. <><><><><><> Icy hands twine around my waist and, in my dream, they're sharp, frozen alien tendrils, scrapping at my chest, trying to birth one of their own. I can hear Mulder, screaming in pain as they slash him, screaming for me as his eyes glaze over, terrified and fixed on me, my name gurgling from his lips as he exhales his last breath. "You awake?" A sleepy voice asks and I push the hands away, not quite conscious. "Dana," Ethan whispers, nuzzling my neck with his cold nose, "Are you awake? I have a surprise for you." "Mmm..." I mumble, shifting away from him again. "Open your eyes," he says, sitting up and turning on the lamp. "What time is it?" I manage to slur out, my heart pounding as I become aware of my true surroundings, not quite able to do as he requested. "Almost one. You can go right back to sleep, I promise." I burrow my head into the pillow and pull the covers up over me where he had pushed them down. Hot Georgia days turn into cold nights, but the air conditioner keeps the house at sixty-eight degrees, not caring about the weather outside. Pulling my left hand out from under the covers, he laces his fingers through mine and, with his other hand, slips something cold and heavy onto my finger. "Dana, look," he commands and I do, seeing the blinding refraction from a too-large diamond engagement ring. "You like it?" he asks softly, arranging it on my finger, then kissing it once he's satisfied. "Yeah," I mumble, wondering why this is important enough to wake me up at almost one in the morning. He kisses me behind my ear, then says jokingly, "I want you to actually wear this one, okay?" When I don't giggle in delight and throw myself into his arms, he realizes his mistake and amends. "I really want this to work this time, Dana. I love you so much." I sigh and pull the covers back up. "I love you, too, Ethan." Content, he reaches over me and switches off the lamp, then settles behind me and is asleep within minutes. Starring out at the darkness, I lean back into him, his arms tightening around me. I really want this to work, too, Ethan, I think as I slip back into oblivion, glancing at the clock one last time before falling asleep and hoping that Mulder is safe in his bed, sleeping peacefully, and will call me first thing tomorrow morning. Goodnight, Mulder. I love you, too. <><><><><><> I slept late this morning - until nearly ten - and dozed on and off after Ethan inadvertently woke me up with a kiss as he left. True luxury, I've discovered, is being able to press the snooze button on your alarm for two hours before finally deciding to get up. I was determined to be productive and resourceful today, and getting up early was a big part of that. So last night, I'd set my alarm for eight a.m. As I waited for Ethan to get home, I planned my day in my head: get up, eat breakfast, contact the CDC about possible employment, spent time with Emma doing what ever she wanted to do, call my mother and apologize, letting her know that I was here and safe, and call Mulder every fifteen minutes. Of course, I was thrown off schedule by oversleeping, but I just couldn't bring myself to climb out of the big, comfortable, warm, soft bed. When I finally do manage to get up, I take a lazy shower and dress in clean pajamas, then mentally cross breakfast off my list. It's almost lunch time, anyway. The CDC's web page doesn't list any specific openings, so I type a cover letter stating my qualifications and credentials, then say that I'm looking for any position they can give me. I print it and my resume, then fax them to their Human Resources department. It's been a week since I'd faxed these things to Emory and I still haven't gotten a response, though the web page said it could take up to a month. I have the time to wait, though I want to finish getting settled in here, and a job is a big part of that to me. A job is permanence, a responsibility and a commitment. If I had a job, I couldn't just leave - I'd have to give a two weeks notice, at least, so it would keep me grounded and focused, give me something to do to help develop a sense of normalcy to this new, foreign life I've acquired. I wonder if Mulder has settled into his new routine with ease, the fast pace and high stress of the BSU familiar and comforting to him. I wonder if he's gotten used to me being gone. I wonder if he's gotten a new partner yet and he's already breaking them in, silently wishing for me - someone who knows him, someone who pushes him and challenges him and accepts him the way that he often is, distant, reclusive, and standoffish, someone who can pull him out of his moods and brighten his day just by being with him, just by telling him with my eyes or a slight grin that I care about him, that I love him. Yes, I love him. He may not believe that, but I do. Love doesn't have to be romantic and passionate and all consuming. Love is dedication, loyalty, devotion, tolerance, and tenacity, even if those qualities aren't readily accepted by the person that you love. When I'd found him in that basement office eight years ago, he was so alone, so needy for someone's acceptance and approval, even though he didn't want to admit it. He took one look at me and saw a girl, fresh and naive and gullible, eager to succeed and please my superiors in every way, and imagined that I'd be just like everyone else. That I would deceive him, that I would spy on him and lie to him and claim allegiance to him, then rat him out to his enemies to climb another rung on the ladder. He guarded himself and his emotions against me, having been burned too many times by others. He pushed me away with jokes and stern words, brush-off explanations and condescending demands, thinking that, when we returned from Oregon, I would run as far and as fast as I could from him, because as much as it hurt him to be alone, it hurt him worse to let someone in, only to have them abandon him later. I stayed, though, matched his stern tone and condescending words with my own, but most of all, I respected him, listened to him, didn't call him crazy as soon as I met him. He let me in and, over the years, I became his only confidant, his only friend and ally, his constant, unquestionable companion. He had changed, become happier, more trusting of everyday situations, like the man who asked him for the time in a restaurant one night, more open to life and all that it could offer. I liked to think that all of that was because of me, that he knew that he no longer had to carry the weight by himself, that he wasn't all alone in the world. And, somehow during those eight years, he became my only confidant, my only friend and ally, my constant, unquestionable companion. I pushed other friends away, always missing Mulder when I wasn't with him, longing for his wry humor and his unbelievable tenderness towards me. I never conceived of the idea that we would ever part that I would ever leave him under the circumstances that I had, but I'd had my reasons and I can only hope that, one day, he'll understand them. He's still irreplaceable in my life, though, and I'd like to think that I'm just as irreplaceable in his. I feel an emptiness deep inside me without him now. I feel like a piece of myself has been torn away, like a limb in a sudden car accident. I woke up from a coma, only to discover that my right arm was missing, yet I could still feel it, feel the tingling injuries and sore bruises it sustained. Even from a thousand miles away, I still feel Mulder. I've felt it all these years, whether we were together or apart, even if I suspected him dead. I still felt him, still knew that he was with me where ever I went. Now, though, the gaping hole is being torn open anew every time I pick up the phone and realize that he's not answering. I feel him and, in some intangible way, I know that he's safe, but my imagination still gets the better of me sometimes. I don't feel his emotions as well as I feel just him, all of him, but, intellectually, I know that he feels these phantom pains just as I do, missing his limb, wondering what will fill that void now. Nothing. Nothing will ever fill that void for me. Just as the fax finishes, I hear Emma softly pad down the stairs and into the kitchen, presumably looking for me. "I'm in here, Emma," I call to her and she follows my voice, stopping just inside the doorway into the study. Her eyes suddenly grow larger when she sees me sit down at the computer and click the mouse, opening the web browser to check my email. "That's Daddy's computer," she says in a low, serious tone. "I know," I say, glancing at her. "But I don't think Daddy will mind if I use it." Other than the standard annoying spam porn advertisements I have no new mail. The promise of hot, farm girls makes me think of Mulder, though, and those videos that aren't his, and I have to smile, even though I'm disappointed yet again by still not receiving a response from him. "Daddy said I'm not allowed in here," Emma announces, lancing me out of my reverie. I can imagine why Ethan wouldn't want Emma in his office, with all of his organized chaos that could be disturbed and the expensive equipment that, to a child, looks like a new toy. I close the web browser and stand, Emma's round eyes following me as I walk towards her. "What would you like for lunch?" I cheerily ask her, changing the subject. She shrugs and sits down at the kitchen table, kicking her feet restlessly against the bottom of the chair. I walk to the pantry and get out the bread, peanut butter, and chips, then to the refrigerator for the strawberry jelly, and set them on the counter. I had picked at the leftover lasagna I'd made for four days until I'd finally given up and thrown the rest of it away yesterday. Not having anything else that looks appetizing to me, I fix Emma's sandwich and set it in front of her without saying another word. It's been almost two weeks since I've arrived, I know the routine by now. After she finishes, she and I will go change and head down towards the pool where I'll listen to Carrie and Sonya and, occasionally, another woman named Penny prattle on about what they saw on Oprah yesterday or their latest shopping excursion or their children's various activities. Several times, I've had to stop myself from standing up and screaming at these women to get a life for themselves, to be strong and claim a little independence from their domineering husbands, to live for themselves instead of for their children and families all the time. I imagine that they would only stare at my through their sunglasses and continue calmly talking just as before, not understanding my outburst. Today, I'm taking a book with me. I'm sure I can find something - a novel or an old medical journal - to pass the time while Emma and I are there. "You and Daddy are getting married," Emma states matter of factly, staring at me very intensely, a smear of jelly on her cheek. "Yes," I say softly, gazing out the French doors. "Does that mean that you're gonna live here forever?" "I suppose so." I look at her, then, and smile. She looks away. "How do you feel about that, Emma?" She shrugs and takes another bite of her sandwich. "You can tell me," I say, leaning closer to her. "Whatever you're feeling, you can always talk to me, even if you don't like me. You can tell me that." She looks at me and her chewing slows, thinking deep, little girl thoughts. "Does that mean you're gonna have a baby?" she asks suddenly. I sit back and close my eyes momentarily, her question catching me off guard. "No. Why do you ask that?" I finally say slowly, measuring my breaths, trying to keep them even. "That's why Mommy had to marry Neil. She was gonna have a baby." Casually, she reaches for her juice and takes a sip. "Daddy said that's why she had to get married," she adds, focusing on her food. "Did Daddy tell you why we're getting married?" I ask her softly. She shakes her head. "Well, I'll tell you, okay?" She looks at me and nods. "Your Daddy and I love each other very much and we want to be with each other forever." She stares through me and I hastily add, "But that doesn't mean that your Daddy doesn't love you any less. He loves you very much, too, Emma." No reaction. "Mommy and Daddy were married and then she left. Are you gonna leave?" She finally asks. "No. Not everyone who gets married leaves." I don't tell her that I can't ever imagine why I would ever leave, but I remember saying the same thing to Mulder a thousand times before, and look what happened. Mulder - I have to call Mulder. "Emma, I'll be right back, okay?" I say, already standing and walking to the phone. I dial his cell phone number quickly and, as I'd suspected, his voice mail picks up. I take a deep breath and add a bit of worry to my voice, thinking that maybe that will help him to call sooner. "Mulder, it's me. Please call me when you get this." As I was speaking, Emma's head turned towards me, watching me carefully. After I hang up the phone, she starts a new discussion. "You called Mulder?" "Yeah," I say, slightly disappointed that I didn't get to talk to him. "Is he gonna come live with us too?" She smiles, looking like she hopes my answer is yes. I smile, too, wondering what Mulder would think of living in a Falls at Arcadia neighborhood permanently. "No. He's gonna stay in Virginia." Her tiny faced falls. "Oh." "You like Mulder, don't you?" She eagerly nods, her eyes brightening. "Maybe he could come visit us. Would you like that?" She nods furiously again and I grin at her. Me too, Emma. <><><><><><> When we got to the pool, Emma immediately ran to the girls and showed them the one thing that she learned from Mulder: how to make a fish face. Once everyone had mastered it, they came over to us to proudly display their new skill, making their mothers giggle and making me glance at my cell phone, checking to see if I had any missed calls. "Where'd you learn that, Em?" Sonya asks, pulling the leg of her swim suit back with a false nail, checking her tan. "Mulder taught me!" She says gleefully, jumping up and down on her tiny, flip-flop clad feet. "Who?" "Mulder!" She repeats, then runs off after the other girls. "Who's Mulder?" Sonya asks from her seat in front of me, pointed directly towards the sun for maximum tanning ease and convenience. "He was my partner at the FBI," I tell her, closing my old copy of Scientific American. "And Emma knows him?" she asks suspiciously, Penny and Carrie's eyes glue to me, waiting for my answer. "Yeah. Ethan and Emma came to visit me in DC a couple of months ago and Mulder joined us one day. He's really good with kids and Emma seemed to bond with him immediately." "He?" Carrie asks, lowering her sunglasses and looking playfully coy. "Yes, he," I say back, mimicking her. "Cute he?" She asks, Penny slapping her leg teasingly. I smile and blush a little, looking down. "Yes," I finally decide. "Very cute he." They grin and go back to watching the girls, launching into a discussion about what kind of shoes would go with Capri pants and I study my nails, trying not to look at my cell phone again. This is getting a little ridiculous. He has to be getting my messages and, usually, he calls me immediately. Hell, usually he's the one leaving message after message on my machine until I call him. Where is he? After hours at the pool, a thoroughly exhausted Emma retires to her room and I decide to take a more proactive approach to contacting Mulder. If something has happened to him, they'll know. They know everything, even things you don't want them to know. "Lone Gunmen." "Langly, it's me," I say, my words clipped. I hear a series of clicks as he turns off the tape recorder, then puts me on speaker phone. "Scully," he says nervously, loudly, his way of announcing my call to Byers and Frohike. I hear them drop what they're doing and hurry over to huddle around the phone and exchange perplexed glances. "Yeah, I have a question." "What can we do for you?" Frohike asks, a slight leer in his voice. I roll my eyes, actually enjoying the light flirting. It makes me feel good, even if it is with Frohike. "I need to know if you've heard from Mulder in the last couple of weeks. I haven't been able to get in touch with him." They confer, then Byers speaks. "No, we're sorry, Agent Scully. We haven't spoken to him in about a month." "Great," I mutter, my heart speeding up. "He hasn't been showing up for work?" Frohike asks, picking up on my unease. "N-." I catch myself. "He didn't tell you?" I can feel them looking at each other, eyebrows raised. "What?" Langly finally says. I sigh. "They've closed the X-Files." A collective gasp from the other end of the phone. "And I've resigned from the Bureau. I've moved." "I wondered why the caller ID said 'Roswell, Georgia,'" Langly adds. "Anyway, Mulder's not returning my phone calls or my emails. I just wondered if you had talked to him." Silence on the other end. Finally, Byers speaks. "Do you want us to check on him for you?" He asks slowly, almost sounding like he hopes I'll say no. "Would you? He may just be out of town, but he's not answering his cell phone, either." I pause. "I'm worried about him." "We'll take care of it," Frohike assures me. "Thank you. Just tell him...tell him to call me. Or to email me. Or something. I just want to make sure he's okay." "Will do," Byers says, then the phone disconnects as they hang up. I'm glad that Mulder's not completely alone without me. Even though he and the Gunmen had never been any more than casual friends, it still comforts me to know that there are some people who care about him, who can watch out for him and make sure that he's okay. They'll call him, take him out for cheese-steaks, and tell him that I'd asked about him, wondering if he was okay. Then, he'll call me, apologizing for not calling sooner and for worrying me. He's fine, he'll say, though he does miss me. I miss you, too, Mulder, I'll say and we'll listen to each other breathe for a few minutes before one of us breaks the silence and announces that we have to go. We'll hang up, each promising the other a phone call tomorrow, or a brief email, catching us up on all of the changes that have happened in the past two weeks. As I'd told him before I left, just because we're apart physically doesn't mean that we have to be apart emotionally. Our friendship will survive, as strong as ever, it will just have to evolve a little. <><><><><><> Later that week, I meet Ethan at the garage door, beaming and excited. He kisses me deeply and tells me he missed me at work, then looks for Emma behind me and, not seeing her, asks where she is. It's after nine o'clock, and I tell him that she's been in bed for nearly an hour. "I got an interview, Ethan," I burst out as he turns towards the kitchen, loosening his tie and opening the refrigerator. He stops, holding the door open, and gapes at me. "What?" "I got an interview at Emory. It's tomorrow morning." Seeing his face become stony and serious, my elation flees. "Dana," he says slowly, "I thought we talked about this." My right eyebrow creeps high on my forehead, not understanding. "I told you: you don't have to work." He goes back to looking for dinner, apparently not expecting me to fight him on this. "You said we would talk about it, but we never did. And I know I don't have to work. I know that you make enough money." He slams the heavy door and turns towards me, hands on his hips. "But I told you: I want to work, whether I need to or not." He hangs his head and a long, tired sigh escapes his lips. "Why?" He asks sharply, raising his head and looking me straight in the eyes. "Because..." Do I really have to explain this to him? "I've been doing nothing but sitting in the house playing maid for two weeks and I'm bored out of my mind." "School starts in a few weeks, volunteer in Emma's class. You don't have to spend all of your time here," he says, like that should be obvious to me. "Volunteering doesn't pay," I mumble, regretting it as soon as it's out of my mouth. "What's that supposed to mean?" He asks, raising his voice and coming to tower over me, trying to intimidate me. "It means that I don't like not having my own money. I want my own money and a life outside you and Emma." "Why?" I take a deep breath. "Because, I see these women - Carrie and Penny and Sonya - they don't have a life of their own. They don't have their own identity. All they are is their children and husbands and they're completely dependent on someone else. I don't want to be like that. I want my own identity. I don't want to introduce myself and have to state my relation to someone else to be noticed or important. I don't want my entire life to be about your life and Emma's life." He shifts his feet and looks down briefly, calculating his words. "In case you haven't figured it out by now, Dana, marriage is not about one person. It's about two people sharing their lives together. We can't have a healthy marriage if we're just two people living in the same house and sleeping in the same bed. We have to sacrifice some parts of ourselves for the other, and that's what you still don't seem to realize. You're about to become my wife and you're about to become a step-mother; you're going to have to make some changes to accommodate that." "No, Ethan, I understand that. I know that I'll have to make some changes and I'm willing to do that. But it seems to me that I've always been the one to make the sacrifices while you dictate to me what I'm supposed to do. That's the way it was before and I'm not gonna let you do that to me again." He squints his eyes, clearly angry that I would dare to defy him. "You have no idea how much I've had to sacrifice for you, Dana. I sacrificed the first opportunity I ever had to be a father to you, so you could keep your precious independence and fancy career -" "Don't," I warn, taking a step away from him. "Don't you dare try and justify this by saying that I owe it to you." "I'm not." He takes a deep breath and pinches the bridge of his nose in annoyance. "The reason I work the hours that I do is so that you and Emma can have all this," he says, gesturing to the kitchen and the rest of the expensive house. "I don't just work seventy hour weeks because I enjoy it." "This isn't up for discussion," I decide, turning away from him and walking towards the stairs. He follows me, grabbing my arm and turning me towards him roughly. "Yes, it is, Dana. You don't make the rules around here." "Neither do you," I say, wrenching myself out of his grasp and stomping up the stairs, slamming and locking the bedroom door behind me. <><><><><><> When he doesn't come to bed by midnight, I consider getting up to see if he's still working or simply ignoring me, so mad at me that he's sleeping in the guest bedroom. I curl up in the indentation that he's left in the mattress and inhale his scent from the pillow, feeling petulant and juvenile. Yes, I told him that I would sacrifice what ever I had to in order to have him in my life, but I never dreamed that he would ask me to sacrifice myself. My career at the FBI was my life and I felt a sense of pride and accomplishment to know that I had helped to make the world a safer place on a daily basis. As a medical professor, I would still make the world a safer place, only indirectly. I would still be making a positive contribution to the world and that's important to me. My job may be my life, but at least it's better than having other people be my life. And I've already given up my dream job at Quantico for Ethan - what more does he expect? Is it too much for me to want to have something that's mine, that's not entirely ours? I curl up tighter, cold without his heat beside me. If this is what it costs me: Ethan being angry with me, I almost don't think it's worth it. A few minutes later, I hear a knock on the bedroom door and get up to open it for him. He looks tired and wrinkled, but his eyes are soft and apologetic. "Dana, I'm sorry," he says. "You gonna make me sleep out here tonight?" Despite myself, I grin and open the door wider. He climbs into bed behind me, pulls me towards him, then whispers against my neck, "You kept it warm for me." I grin again and lace my fingers with his. "I think you were apologizing," I remind him. He laughs softly. "I'm sorry for getting angry at you. It was a long day," is all he says before running his free hand over my rib cage. "You've lost weight," he says into my ear. I nod, my anger rising again. That's it? He's sorry for getting angry? He's not sorry for forbidding me to have a life of my own? "What time is your interview?" he finally asks a few minutes later. "Eleven." "Maybe we could meet for lunch." I don't respond. I'll be anxious tomorrow, being in a foreign city, not knowing where I'm going, wondering if Mulder or the Gunmen have called. I won't have time to eat. "Love you," Ethan whispers to me. I relax against him and take a deep breath. He loves me. "Love you too," I whisper back and he tightens his arms around me, both of us asleep within minutes. <><><><><><> Mulder always told me that I looked good in red, so I'd worn his favorite red suit - the one with the black on the lapels. I curled my hair, too. He told me once that he liked my hair best curly. He said it made me look like a movie start from the forties, a classic beauty. I remember that I blushed when he told me that. "Now you match," he'd said, his eyes lighting up and a rare, silly grin crossing his face. When I got to Emory, right before my interview was supposed to start, I'd dialed his cell phone again, nervousness and worry making the meager breakfast I'd eaten rise in my stomach. I still hadn't heard from him in the nearly three weeks since I'd left - something has to be wrong. He just wouldn't not call me. Would he? The last time I'd worn this suit, the skirt had pinched in the side; now, it hangs off of me, resting loosely on my pronounced hip bones. Out of curiosity, I find a scale and weigh myself: 97.5 pounds. Wonderful, my mother will think I'm anorexic. Oh, there's another thing I can do daily now, call my mother. I'm sure she'll be ecstatic that I'm following in her footsteps and becoming a house wife. Dr. Bradley'd said that my resume and credentials were impressive, but since I hadn't ever practiced and my specialty was in a field that, at Emory, wasn't in high demand at the moment, that he couldn't see hiring me. "It wouldn't be practical, you understand," he'd said. I'd nodded and walked out, finding the nearest restroom and starring at my pale, sunken face in the mirror as tears rolled unchecked down my cheeks. I'd never been refused anything before. I'd always succeeded. I didn't know what it was like to fail. After drying my tears, I'd called Ethan and told him that I was finished if he still wanted to meet for lunch. He barely had enough time to say that he couldn't, not even asking about my interview, so I hung up and drove home, brooding and humiliated. I guess this is another one of those signs that God keeps sending me, telling me what I'm supposed to do. By not getting the job, God must be telling me that Ethan is right, that I don't have to work. I just wish sometimes that God would show me that I'm right. With Emma at Carrie's until three, and not knowing what else to do, I finally decide to call my mother after changing out of my suit, folding it, and packing it away with the rest. I won't ever need them again, I guess. Maybe I should give them to Goodwill, but I just can't bear to part with them. With some of these suits, I can tell you when I wore it and what case Mulder and I were working on at the time, can tell the story of the sewn up tear in one of the legs or the frayed cuff of a jacket. After looking through all of them, refolding them, and covering the suitcase with boxes again, I open a drawer and pull out Mulder's pajama pants, rolling them up at least five times at the waist, then find a comfortable tank top to change into before sitting on the edge of the bed and picking up the phone, stopping myself from dialing his number by instead, calling my mother. "Hello," she cheerily says into the phone, making me wince and wonder what the hell I was thinking. "Mom, it's me," I manage to say. I sound like a scolded child trying to defend itself even though it knows it's guilty of whatever it's just been scolded for. She takes a deep, even breath, then says tersely, "Dana." I look around the bedroom, searching for something to say. "Are you busy?" I ask, waiting to be scolded again. "No." "Oh. Well, I just wanted to let you know that I'm at Ethan's...in Atlanta." I can feel the dark cloud that she imposed over me lift immediately and her voice brightens, relief evident. "When did you leave?" "The night after I talked to you." You know, when I hung up on you? "You don't sound very happy about that," she observes. "It's not that," I try and explain. "I am happy here." I guess, anyway. "But I just got back from a job interview. I didn't get the job, Mom." I suddenly feel like crying. I remember the first time I got a B in college, I'd called her and told her the news before she got my report card in the mail, to prepare her. I went on and on about how I was a failure, how horrible and stupid I felt. I thought that she'd be disappointed, but she wasn't. She didn't say a word to me over the phone, not even to remind me that a B was still good, that I wasn't stupid or horrible. She never showed that report card to Ahab, though. "I'm sorry, Dana," she says, sounding sincere. "Ethan didn't want me to have a job anyway. He got mad when I told him last night about the interview," I sniff. "Oh," is all she says. "Is that what Dad did to you? Did he forbid you from having a life outside him and us kids?" "No. Your father never forbade me to do anything. I wanted to stay home with all of you." I know she's lying - how could anyone be content with that kind of life? "Did you ever regret it? Staying home with us?" "No. I raised all of you, got to spend time with you and be involved in your lives -" "But what happened when Chaz moved out? Once we were all gone, what did you do then?" She takes a deep breath, her fairy tale shattered. "By then, your father was retired, so we spent time together." Oh, I get it. After you stopped waiting on us hand and foot, you started doing the same for him. "Dana, raising a family is an important job in itself. It's also a much tougher one that you seem to realize. If you remember, I was always busy doing something, whether it was taking one of you to dance lessons or baseball practice, or cooking or cleaning, my work was never done. You'll find that, after a while, being a wife and mother becomes more important than any professional status or career." "I've been here for almost three weeks and I'm bored out of my mind," I tell her, not convinced by her diatribe. "You just have to get used to it," she says, sounding like she's scolding again. I nod at the phone, then fall silent, waiting for her to ask the inevitable. I don't have to wait long. "So, have you set a date yet?" I sigh. "Ethan said something about Labor Day weekend -" "That's less than a month away. You have lots of planning to do." "No, Mom. I don't want a big wedding. Just a small, family service," I tell her, knowing that it's futile. "You're the only daughter I'll ever get to see get married, Dana, and you're not cheating me out of this," she says firmly and I hang my head, remembering that I cheated her out of seeing her other daughter get married. As I sit, chewing my lip and waiting for her to elaborate about the dress and the flowers and the food, the phone beeps, announcing that someone is calling in. "Mom, I need to go," I say hurriedly, sitting up and my finger already hovering over the button. "Dana, what's the mat-" The phone beeps again. "Nothing. I just have to go. I'll call you later." Then I click the button. It's about damn time Mulder called me back. It's not Mulder, though. It's a telemarketer. I hang up on him, then pull the covers down and climb into bed, another headache deciding to make an appearance in my temples. When the phone rings again, I notice that the clock beside the bed says three thirty. It's probably Carrie, wondering where I am to pick up Emma. I apologize, tell her that my interview ran over and that I'd just walked in the door. She sends Emma home, then asks me if I'm all right, saying that I sound sick. I'm fine, I tell her, rubbing my forehead against the midday sun slanting through the blinds. As Emma plays in her room, I drag myself into the study to check my email: still nothing from Mulder. I've almost stopped expecting anything. Ethan gets home at six, early for him, and announces that he wants to take Emma and me out to dinner. Emma is, of course, excited, but I decline, telling them to go ahead. Looking disappointed, Ethan tells Emma that we'll go out another night and makes it up to her with pizza. "How'd your interview go?" He finally asks over the cardboard box and paper plates. I put down my partially eaten first piece. "I didn't get the job," I say softly, then stand and take my plate to the garbage can, throwing it away. "I'm sorry, Dana," he says to me a few minutes later as we lay down for the night. "No, you're not," I tell him. "You got what you wanted." He stares at me in the half light from the moon, swallowing what ever arguments he has, then turns away from me and falls asleep, hugging the edge of the bed. I wish Mulder were here. No matter what time it was, no matter what was wrong, I could always talk to him. He would never judge me or interrupt me, never give me unsolicited advice and never reproached me. His soft puffs of breath would soothe my temper and, without having said a word, he would've made me feel better, made me feel a little less burdened and a little more cared for. If I thought he'd answer, I'd call him now. He'd understand why it was so important to me to have a job, to have my own life. He'd support me and call Ethan an ass for telling me what to do. He'd respect me and my desires and, if I asked him, he'd be with me before the sun came up. But he won't answer. Either he's really angry with me or he's dying and right now, I can't decide which would be worse. <><><><><><> Penny called this morning and asked if Emma and I would like go with her and Stephanie, her daughter who's the same age as Emma, and Matthew, her younger son, to Kennesaw Mountain. The girls would be going back to school in a few weeks, so she'd thought it would be nice to have one last outing with them this summer. "I miss her so much when she's at school," Penny said on the drive over. "I can't imagine what it will be like when she goes to college." I looked out the window and rolled my eyes, thinking how pathetic she was. Although the park had hiking trails and Civil War exhibits, the girls were content to play in the grass while Penny and I sat on the blanket we'd spread out for our picnic. Matthew, who was two, spent most of his time trying to eat flowers or bugs and making hilariously adorable faces at his mother when she told him to stop. Jealousy and longing that I hadn't expected rose in my chest and I turned away, blinding myself with the bright sun. The CDC called this morning right before Penny, offering me a job dependent on my perfunctory interview, as they'd called it. I'd taken a deep breath, hesitated, then thanked them, but told them that I'd already found a job. For the first time in almost a month, I didn't call Mulder today. I'm still waiting on the Gunmen to call, but he has my numbers and email address if he wants to talk to me. Just as Penny launches into a horror story about a manicurist, I snap my head sharply towards the girls as one of the them emits a shriek, both of them running towards us. "What happened?" she asks, seeing Stephanie clutching her arm. "A bee stung me," she says thickly through a few tears. Penny pulls her daughter's hand away from her arm and examines the reddening welt. "It's fine, honey," she tells her. "Emma, are you all right?" I ask her, grabbing her arm and yanking her towards me. Not giving her a chance to answer, I keep talking. "Did you get stung? Did you see any more bees?" She shakes her head, looking at my fingers, clamped tightly onto her arm. My heart keeps pounding, my mind telling me to get away before it's too late. A mountain, bees...we have to get out of here. "Stephanie, what kind of a bee was it?" I ask, standing up, gesturing for everyone else to do the same. Stephanie shrugs, her tears drying. "Was it big, little? Do you have a funny taste in your mouth? Do you have any pain in you chest?" Frightened, the girl shakes her head frantically. I look around, watching the people warily, calculating exactly how long it will take us to get back to the car. "Dana, what's wrong?" Penny asks, perplexed. "We need to go," I tell her, picking up the blanket and not bothering to fold it. "Why?" "We just do. Right now." I look around again, searching for Men In Black or convenient EMTs. When she doesn't move, I turn to face her, still walking backwards towards the parking lot. "Dana, it's just a bee," she finally says to me. I want to tell her that nothing is just as it seems, sometimes. That the bee could be carrying small pox or some alien virus. There could be swarms of them waiting to infect all of us, men waiting to take us away to cold, sterile ships where we can incubate their young until they're born, sucking our lives out of us, then bursting out of our chest and killing us. Still starring at me, I take a deep breath, embarrassed. It's just a bee, Dana. I swallow and nod, hanging my head and finally letting my death grip on Emma's arm loosen. Just a bee. <><><><><><> I can hear the phone ringing as soon as I'm out of the car and I run to the door, leaving Emma to turn off the alarm while I answer it. "Hello?" Mulder? "Agent Scully?" "Yes." It's Byers. Finally! "It's John Byers," he says in his gentle, polite tone. "Is this a bad time?" "No, not at all. Did you get in touch with Mulder?" It's been more than a week since I talked to them - they better have talked to Mulder. "Yes, we did." A pause, then a heavy sigh. I'm on speaker phone again and Frohike isn't happy. "He said that he's gotten your messages," Byers says carefully. "So why hasn't he called?" "You didn't tell us you were getting married," Frohike growls. I lean against the counter, rubbing my eyes. "Did he tell you that?" "Yes," Langly chimes in. I nod at the kitchen. "I ask again, why hasn't he called? I was worried about him." They quietly confer, then Byers answers. "Agent Scully," I guess I should remind him that it's no longer Agent Scully, but I let it slide. "He's a little upset by all this." I sigh and say softly, "I know." "He's...he's okay, Scully. He's not great, but he's doing okay." Frohike sounds as sad as I suddenly feel. "You're sure?" They confer again. "Yeah," Langly finally answers for them. "Did you tell him to call me?" "Yeah," they say in unison. I hesitate. "Thank you. I really appreciate this." "You're welcome, Agent Scully." "I never really thought about it before, but you guys have done so much for us over the years and I don't think I've ever said thank you. I'm glad that Mulder has friends like you." I feel the collective blush spread amongst them, then Frohike says, "It's been a pleasure to know you too, Scully." I smile a little and the silence grows between us. "Bye," I finally whisper. "If you need anything else, Agent Scully, just let us know. We'll always be here." I sniff, touched at their sincerity and generosity. "I will." "Bye," and the phone clicks as they hang up. Contemplating my next move, I can't help but be infuriated by Mulder's actions. He'd said that he would miss me, he'd said that he loved me, he'd said that he wouldn't let me go, that he couldn't let me go. It's been less than a month and, already, he's cutting me off. He won't speak to me, won't even return my goddamn emails. He may be finished with me, but I'm not finished with him yet. I quickly dial the FBI operator and ask for Fox Mulder, not knowing what his new office number is. After a few seconds, the phone is picked up and the loud clatter of voices talking and papers rustling greets me, then a weary, low voice, "Mulder." My anger fades as his forlorn voice permeates me down to my soul and I choke back my hateful words, quietly panting into the phone instead of saying anything. "It's me," I finally whisper, praying he doesn't hang up on me. The papers on his desk stop rustling and he holds his breath, not knowing what to say. "I wondered if you'd fallen off the Earth," I say, falsely confident and trying to lighten the mood. "You had the Gunmen check up on me. Didn't they tell you that I was still here?" His voice is cold and angry, with a tinge of sadness behind it that he doesn't want me to detect. "I was worried about you. I didn't know if something had happened to you -" "I can take care of myself, Scully, I don't need another mother," he snaps. "My world just doesn't stop turning because you left." In a shaking voice, I stammer out, "I'm-I'm sorry." He takes a deep breath, then, "I'm a little busy right now." He's trying to get rid of me. He doesn't miss me. He doesn't love me. It was all a lie. I guess he doesn't miss me as much as he said he would. I guess he discovered that living without me is more liberating than he imagined. I guess he realized that he really doesn't love me, just as I suspected he would. But it still hurts. It hurts to know that I came so close to giving up this life with Ethan so that I could spend my life with him when he was lying to me, manipulating me the whole time. If I'd stayed with him, he would've abandoned me and then I would've been completely alone forever. So I made the right choice. I was starting to wonder. Tears drip down my face and onto the shiny linoleum floor. "I'm sorry," I repeat. I hear him open his mouth to say something else, then snap it shut and slowly put down the phone, shutting me out of his life. I hold the phone to my ear until the rapid, loud beeping sounds, reminding me that I'm alone now. I push the talk button, ending the beeping, then slowly sink down to the floor against the cabinets and wrap my arms around my knees, shaking, tears streaming down my cheeks, choking back my sobs. <><><>End Part 2<><><> <><><>Begin Part 3<><><> Mulder, there you are. I was wondering if you were really angry with me, if you had really already forgotten about me. No, you were right, you were busy. You've had your head between my thighs this whole time. Dammit, you could've told me. I was worried. Well, that's okay. You're obviously very sorry for what you've done. And very repentant. Yes...very, very sorry. I always wondered what you could do with that tongue. I've watched and envied those sunflower seeds for years - it's fueled my vibrator fantasies more often than I care to admit. I'll just lay here and let you make it up to me, okay? You just keep doing exactly what you're doing. You're doing well. Very well. Very, very well. God, Phoebe and Diana were fools to ever leave you... "Are you finally awake?" My eyes snap open - what happened to Mulder's voice? "I thought I was losing my touch, here." Ethan grins and dips his head again, licking and sucking. I turn my head on the pillow, fisting the sheets in my hand. Ethan, not Mulder... My thighs are trembling and he pulls back, kissing the insides of them softly before sliding up my body. "It never took that long to wake you before," he says against my neck, making a hot, wet trail from my ear lobe to my collar bone. I put my arms around him, reminding myself where I am and who I'm with. I dreamed about Mulder because he's been on my mind lately - I had been worried about him, afraid that he was done with me, never wanted to speak to me again. And Ethan's actions inspired Mulder's actions in my dream. Yeah, that's it. "You okay?" He lazily asks, tracing a renegade tear tract across my cheek and up to my eye lashes. "Yeah," I say softly. I must've started crying in my sleep, dreaming about Mulder. Mulder... "What? Dana, what's the matter?" Okay, I'll tell you the truth, Ethan. Mulder and I kissed before I left. He begged me to stay with him, he told me that he loved me more than anything, that he had loved me for years. I almost gave in to him, I almost stayed. I've been trying to get in touch with him since I've arrived and I haven't been able to. I thought that he was sick or hurt or dead when, really, he just didn't want to talk to me. He lied to me. He doesn't love me. He never did. "Nothing," I tell him, turning my head away. "You sure?" He sits up and I can see the outline of his face hovering over mine in the darkness. I almost gave this up for a lie. "Yes." When he doesn't immediately finish what he started, my thighs still trembling around him, I whisper to him, "Love me." He latches on to my neck, then, and loves me. <><><><><><> For the first Sunday since I've been here, over a month now, Ethan doesn't have to work. I guess I underestimated how important he was at CNN. I certainly underestimated how much money he made. He woke up early, as he's used to doing, and laid in bed, holding me, softly touching my skin with his lips and hands until I woke up an hour later. In the cool morning air, we made achingly slow, infinitely tender love to each other, careful not to wake Emma. He spooned up behind me after we'd finished and laced his left hand through mine, examining my ring. "It needs something else," he says, twisting it back and forth, trying to arrange it perfectly. It's just where he left it when he gave it to me, I haven't taken it off. "I think it's big enough as it is." "No. It needs a companion." Oh, okay. I get it. He nuzzles my neck and whispers against my skin, "Have you thought any more about the wedding? Labor Day is in a couple of weeks." I sigh and pull his arm tighter around me. "No." "You gonna let your Mother do all the planning?" "It doesn't matter what I want, she'll find something wrong with it." "That's not true," he says. "Yes, it is. I told her that I don't want a big wedding and she insists that we have one. I told her that I don't want a lot of people there and she wants to invite all of our extended family." "What about me?" I turn to him, stretching out on my back, partially underneath him. "What do you mean?" "This is my wedding, too. What if I want a big wedding with lots of people?" I reach for him, tangling my fingers in his hair. "Why do you want that?" He leans down to me. "I want everyone to know that I'm marrying Dana Scully. I want the whole world to know how happy we are." "I'm sure the world doesn't care, Ethan." "I care." He kisses me, long and deep, and I forget how I was going to respond to what he said. "This is every little girl's dream, isn't it? A big wedding with the pretty, white dress and bridesmaids and flowers. How would Melissa feel if you deprived her of the opportunity to play maid of honor?" I close my eyes and think back to what my mother said, how I'd robbed her of seeing one daughter get married and she wouldn't allow me to do that again. Tears must be streaming from my eyes again. "Dana, please talk to me. Don't keep everything inside." "I never told you," I begin, sniffing. "What?" "Missy's dead." Surprised, he leans back a little. "What happened?" "She was murdered. In my apartment. Someone was trying to kill me and shot her instead." His mouth gapes. "Someone was trying to kill you?" he asks incredulously. "Yes." "Why?" "I had something that I wasn't supposed to have and I knew things that I wasn't supposed to know," I say softly. He shakes his head. "That doesn't make any sense." "I was warned that someone would kill me in my home. And then she told me that she was coming over...I just forgot. When I remembered, I called her back, but she had already left. I tried to meet her on the way, to stop her, but I couldn't. It was my fault." He just stares at me, not knowing what to say or do. Since he doesn't tell me to stop, I continue pouring my heart out to him. "I didn't even get to the hospital in time to tell her I was sorry. Mulder...Mulder said she knew, but I don't think she did." Tears overcoming me, I turn on my side and bury my head in my pillow, my back shaking with my sobs. I miss my sister. After a long hesitation, Ethan finally reacts. "Dana..." He touches my shoulder lightly, trying to comfort me. I remember Mulder doing the same, the night Missy died. We sat in her hospital room holding each other, not saying anything for hours. It was one of the only times I had allowed myself to cry in front of him, one of the only times I let myself accept his comfort. I miss Mulder. "Is that what was wrong with you the other day? Emma said that you answered the phone and then started crying." I stop, sniff, and turn my head to look at him over my shoulder. "That was Mulder. I called him." "And he made you cry?" Yes. "No." He kisses my cheek, tracing his tongue up to my eye again, absorbing my tears, then leans back a little, looking into my eyes. "I'm sorry about Melissa." I nod. "Maybe you'll feel better after Mass," he decides, moving towards the edge of the bed. "No. I don't want to go." Since I've arrived, I've yet to attend Mass, even though Ethan depended on me to take Emma. I just never woke up early enough and, if I did, I just never felt like getting up. Emma never complained, anyway. "It'll be good for you. We need to start going on a regular basis again, especially if we're gonna be married in that church. People have to get to know you." It would be futile to tell him that I don't want a church wedding, so I just shake my head at him, pulling the covers over my chilled body. "I don't feel well," I tell him, not really lying. He sighs and comes around the bed to sit beside me. "You don't feel well a lot, lately. You're not eating, you have nightmares all the time. Are you sure there's nothing wrong?" "I'm fine." His shoulders sag. "What can I do?" he asks, leaning down to kiss my forehead. Bring Mulder back. "Nothing." He nods, then stands and disappears into the bathroom. The sound of the shower spray lulls me into sleep again and when I wake up, late morning sun spilling in through the open blinds, I discover that I'm alone. Ethan must've taken Emma to Mass without me. When I stand, my legs are shaky and weak and I immediately feel dizzy. In the bathroom, I weigh myself and find that I've lost another six and a half pounds; I barely weight ninety, now. I lazily brush my teeth, the strong, minty paste making me gag, and dress in Mulder's blue Oxford, wishing that I hadn't washed it and that it still smelled like him. I comb my limp, dull hair and notice that it looks thinner that it ever has. Like when I was sick with cancer, my eyes are sunken and dull, the whites tinged yellow. My ribs stick out sickeningly and my stomach is starting to look concave. Nearly in tears again and exhausted from my minimal activity, I crawl back in bed, curling up into a fetal ball in the center, hug my pillow, and sob alone in the big, empty house. If Mulder were here, he'd be thinking of ways to annoy the neighbors, putting a pink flamingo in the front yard and setting up his basketball hoop in the drive way. He'd call me Laura and make jokes about how we should act more like a married couple, keeping his arm around me and playfully insisting that he be allowed to sleep in the bed with me. When we would go to dinner, making our polite rounds in the neighborhood families, he would sound so serious as he talked about eating dolphins, horrifying the quaint couple sitting across from us. He'd make up a story about how we met, making me into the magnetic bracelet wearing, UFO chasing, new ager. He'd make this boring situation tolerable, he'd add humor and life to my humorless, lifeless existence. I miss Mulder. <><><><><><> A warm body drapes itself over me, pushing the hair off of my neck with its nose and kissing me just over the tiny scar on the nape. Large hands and strong arms brace themselves around me, making me feel small and protected, a deep, soft voice washing over me as I slowly wake up. "You've been into my clothes," the voice observes and I shake my head, his lips tracing my shoulders under the collar of the shirt. No, you gave me this shirt, remember? You told me how good I looked in blue, especially if it was your blue. Don't you remember, Mulder? "It's almost dinner time. I want you to come down and eat with me, or at least let me bring something up here for you." I shake my head again. "Dana, you've been sleeping all day. You have to get up and you have to eat." He pushes the covers off of me, then slips one arm under my knees, the other under my shoulders and lifts me, placing me on my feet. I immediately fall back against the bed, not able to stand. "Dana," he says in exasperation. "You've made yourself sick. Come on." He picks me up again and walks us to the door. "Emma's at Sonya's for the night, so we can have what ever you want." I want to go back to bed. After he seats me at the kitchen table, he opens the newly stocked pantry, searching for food. "How about some soup? Do you like tomato soup?" I stare blankly at the table, not responding. In a few minutes, a steaming bowl of thick, bloody looking liquid is placed in front of me. Ethan puts another one down at his chair, then stares at me, waiting for me to take the first bite. I slowly raise my eyes to him. "Dana, eat. Humor me, at least." Wanting to get this over with, I pick up the spoon and bring it to my lips, wincing as the hot blood floods my mouth. When I swallow, he smiles and starts eating his own soup, still watching me carefully. When we've finished, we takes our bowls, mine still half-full, to the sink and runs some water in them. "Stay there for a minute, okay?" he says softly, and then goes upstairs, leaving me alone in the kitchen. I should check my email, see if there's anything important. I drag myself to the study, collapsing in the chair at the desk. I'm not expecting an email from Mulder, I remind myself. Still, I'm disappointed yet again when I have nothing from him. I stare at the screen until the screen saver comes on, a slide show of family pictures. Some of Ethan and Emma, some of Emma and a woman with long, dark, curly hair, most just of Emma. I smile, wondering how long it will be before pictures of me make it into the slide show. "Dana?" I hear Ethan call, looking for me. "In here," I tell him and he comes to the door of the study, watching me. "What are you doing?" "Checking my email." "Oh. I have a surprise for you upstairs." He smiles at me and, feeling better than I have in a long while - probably from eating for the first time in days I smile back, following him up the stairs. "Close your eyes," he commands, letting me step in front of him and guiding us into the bathroom. I immediately feel the warm steam envelope me, smell the sweet, relaxing bubbles. Opening my eyes, I gasp slightly in surprise, then clamp them shut, taking a step back, but stopped by Ethan's body. His arms come around me, holding me against him and whispering in my ear. "You like it?" He kisses my temple, oblivious to my rapid breathing and surging pulse. Several candles line the big bath tub, filled to the top with hot water and bubbles. "I thought we needed to relax," he whispers. "Go ahead. I'll be right behind you." "No," I say quietly, trying to step back again. "You don't like it?" he asks, hurt. "No," I tell him again, frantically shaking my head. "What's wrong with it?" "Let me go," I say loudly, instinctive flight mechanism kicking in. "What?" "Let me go!" I scream, turning and trying to run for the door. He catches me, though, and holds me in front of him. "Dana? What's the matter?" I pound my fists against his chest, Ethan and the big bathroom disappearing, Donnie Pfaster and my shattered bedroom taking their places. "Let me go, Goddamn it! Go back to hell!" He drags me into the bedroom, still holding tightly to my arms. He's too big I can't fight him he's gonna kill me Mulder where are you he's here he's here he's gonna kill me - not the closet please not the closet. "Dana? Dana! Stop it! What is the matter with you?" Exhaustion kicking in, I sag against him, his voice finally breaking my hallucination, remembering. Donnie Pfaster is dead. I killed him. I saved myself from him. I'm in Ethan's house. I'm safe. I shake my head, trying to force the thoughts away. Ethan's grip on me loosens and he bends down to look into my eyes. "You okay now?" I nod, feeling a flood of embarrassment and shame creep into my cheeks, then wrap my arms around his waist and bury my face in his chest. He holds me, stroking my hair and whispering comfort into my ear. "What happened? You used to love baths." I nod again and squeeze my eyes shut. After a death fetishist tries to kill you twice, candles and bubble baths involved both times, you lose your affinity for the once-soothing things. I'll go drain the water; you get in bed," he says, then lets me go and walks away. I do as he says and crawl into bed, realizing that I'm still wearing Mulder's shirt. Drying my tears with the sleeves, I wonder what Ethan will think of me keeping and wearing another man's clothes. When he comes to bed, I shift towards him and hold him like a life preserver (saver). The sun has yet to set, but he places his hand over my eyes, softly telling me to go to sleep. "I love you, Dana," is the last thing I hear before I let myself sink into unconsciousness, his arms keeping me safe from all of the evil in the world, the evil that Mulder used to protect me from. <><><><><><> After weeks of nagging and pleading, Ethan and I are finally having dinner with James, head of the Homeowners Association and his wife, Linda. Ethan said that it was an unofficial requirement, that all new residents have dinner with them. There are weeds on my plate. They're all eating their dinners like they're starving African children, weeds and all. Actually, Linda said that they were herbs, thought she didn't tell me their names. She said that they flavored the yellow-sauce covered circle of fish, that they were delicious, and that I would love them. James loved them, she'd beamed, wiping her hands on her vintage 1952 apron and stirring the sauce. I scrap the weeds and sauce off my fish, then inspect a piece of it carefully with my fork before deciding that the salad is much safer. When Linda invited us for dinner, I had no idea I'd actually be helping her cook. I also had no idea that we'd be eating a four course meal, including salad, an appetizer, dessert, and white wine to drink. Sarah Anne, James and Linda's daughter, and Emma are in the kitchen, dining on canned ravioli, giggling and shrieking with delight. I sip my wine, wondering if they'd share some ravioli with me. "So, Dana," James begins, leaning back in his chair and slinging his arm around Linda's shoulders, "what did you do at the FBI?" I gratefully put down my fork. "I worked on something called the X-Files." His eyebrows raise. "They're cases where there's no obvious means, motive, or suspect. Mostly they deal with possible paranormal phenomenon." "So that's where my tax dollars go?" he asks jokingly. "Well, it was a small division of Violent Crimes. Just me and my partner." "And you actually believe in that stuff? The paranormal?" I look down at my food and wince. Yes, I do. I accept the fact that science cannot explain everything. I've witnessed events that defy logical, rational explanation and that, according to all accepted laws of physics, should never have occurred. I've experienced things that I never would have believed, if I hadn't been there myself. "No. My partner was the real expert," I say, sipping my wine again. James smiles. "And you just got tired of all that psychic crap, huh?" My face gets hot and I squint my eyes at him, livid. "She just couldn't resist me anymore," Ethan says, rubbing circles between my shoulders, making them laugh and drop the subject. I just stare at my plate and dissect my fish, pushing it around on my plate. "This is a wonderful dinner, ladies," James declares a few minutes later. It took us almost two hours to prepare it, so it damn sure better be good. "Oh, it was no trouble, was it Dana?" Linda says, blushing slightly. I take a tiny bite and chew so that I don't have to answer. Two hours preparing a meal that we finish in thirty minutes qualifies as a lot of trouble in my book, Mrs. Cleaver. We finish dinner in silence, and then Ethan and James retire to the "game room," leaving Linda and me to clear the table and wash the dishes. "That's a beautiful ring, Dana," she says, gesturing to my left hand, breaking the tense silence. "Thank you." "You know, I've really been eager to meet you. Ethan has talked about you constantly for the past two months." She stops washing and turns to me, a serious look on her face. "He loves you so much. I'm glad you're finally here. I think you'll be good for him." "What do you mean?" I ask, my hands suddenly feeling limp in the tepid water. She shakes her head and goes back to washing. "After what happened with Michelle, he just...he almost had a nervous breakdown. I really think that the only thing that stopped that was Emma. She was the only thing that kept him going. We were all so worried about him, and Emma, too. I believe that a child belongs with her mother, but Michelle is not a fit parent. And Ethan...he tries so hard." I stare out the window above the sink, absently rinsing an already well-rinsed plate. "He needs someone." She looks at me again. "I'm glad he found you, Dana. I'm glad that he'll finally be able to be happy again." I turn my head towards hers, meeting her eyes. "Me, too," I say and she nods, both of us returning to our tasks. As I lay in bed, wrapped in Ethan's arms later that night, I realized that I hadn't thought of Mulder the whole day. Even our dinner with what could've been Win and Cammie from The Falls didn't remind me of him. I must finally be getting over him. <><><><><><> Ethan promised me this morning that he'd be home by six tonight, so I cooked dinner. Emma helped me, excited by the novelty of a family all sitting down for dinner at the same time eating the same meal. While it was cooking, she had the idea that we paint our fingers nails - she would do mine, I would do hers. She wanted pink, of course. I chose pink, too, so that we would match. At six thirty, we all sat down around the big dining room table and ate, Ethan repeatedly commenting about how delicious the meal was and how beautiful his dining companions were. It was much more enjoyable than our stilted dinner out the other night and I found myself laughing and smiling, genuinely having a good time with my little family. Something Linda said that night, and something Emma asked me earlier, prompts me to direct our conversation into more serious subject matter after Emma finishes and retires upstairs, leaving Ethan and me, the wine and the candle light. "Ethan?" He chews. "Yeah?" "Who's Neil?" He abruptly puts down his fork and folds his hands, thinking. "Who did you hear that from?" "Emma." "Emma?" he asks in disbelief. "Yeah. She said that the reason her mother and Neil had to get married was because Michelle got pregnant." He nods and takes a deep breath. "Yeah. That's true." "He was your neighbor?" I ask, remembering what he told me during our first conversation in nearly eight years. "Yeah. He was married with two sons and a baby on the way." "And how did you know that it wasn't your baby she was pregnant with?" He obviously doesn't want to discuss this, but I'm curious. I want to know. I need to know. "We weren't really...getting along when she told me. She was only ten weeks - I could do the math." "Oh." He nods, depressed. "I'm sorry, Ethan." "It's okay," he says, reaching across the table for my hand and linking our fingers. "Everything happens for a reason, Dana." I nod, his thumb stroking the ring on my finger. "Can I ask you a question now?" He asks. "Yeah," I say, wondering what he could possibly want to know. "Will you tell me about Mulder?" "Mulder," I repeat slowly. I hadn't thought of him in days, pushing him out of my mind, trying to move on with my life. Ethan's simple question brings it all back, though. The way Mulder looked as I left him at the airport, how his voice shook slightly as he begged me to stay with him, how he brushed me off later, telling me he was busy. "Yeah. You two seemed so close." I nod. "I want to know some more about him." I pull my hand away from his and tuck them under my legs, trying to figure out what exactly to tell him. "We're best friends." I try not to think about the deep, psychological reasons that I'm still speaking about him in the present tense. "And?" he prompts when I pause. "And...we are very close. I told you, it was just me and him all these years." "What do you mean?" I take a deep breath. "Well...the work that we did...it was very...ambiguous. A lot of times, it felt like it was just us against the evil forces of the world, trying to make the world a safer place for humanity." "By investigating ghost stories and aliens?" I narrow my eyes at him. "No. I told you, there was more to it than that. There's a lot that I haven't told you, that I don't think I can tell you. You wouldn't believe me if I did." He looks at me skeptically. "Just...okay, the work that we did brought us very close together. He was the only person I could trust and I was the only person he could trust." When I run out of things to say, knowing I can't explain this any better, I just stop and push my pasta around on my plate. "Were you ever...closer?" "What do you mean?" "Like, romantically?" I freeze, feeling like I was a teenager caught with my boyfriend in the back seat of his car. This is my cue: I should tell him about what happened just before I left - Mulder kissing me, Mulder telling me that he loved me - but I don't. My mother was right, Ethan doesn't need to know. And as far as I'm concerned, there's no way he'll ever find out. I wonder if that was Michelle's idea, too. "No. No, never romantically," I say softly, not looking at his face. Mulder always told me I was a bad liar - I hope Ethan doesn't notice that. Apparently, he doesn't. He just nods and picks up his wine glass. "So, what's he doing now that they've closed the X- Files?" "He started out at the Bureau profiling; he's very good at it. I think that's what he'll do now." He nods again and puts his glass down, not drinking any of the wine. "Let's get the dishes cleaned up," he says decisively, standing and carrying his plate into the kitchen. Grinning at me mischievously, he wraps his arms around my waist as I'm loading the dishwasher a few minutes later, stopping me and drawing me closer to him. "Why don't you leave those until tomorrow?" "Why?" I ask him, sounding sexy and coy. "Because, it's time for bed." He kissed me behind my ear softly, brushing his knuckles against my breasts. "It's not even eight o'clock yet." "I didn't say it was time to sleep, I said it was time for bed," he clarifies. "Oh," I say, turning to him and kissing him deeply. As Ethan loves me, any lingering thoughts of Mulder are expunged from my brain, allowing me to focus entirely on my fiance for the first time since I left DC. Yes, I'm finally getting over him. It's about time. <><><><><><> Ethan thought it would be a great idea to invite my mother down so that she could see the house and meet her soon-to-be-step- granddaughter and annoy the hell out of me. As soon as we picked her up from the airport, she and Ethan started discussing wedding plans, completely ignoring me, slumping in the back seat. When we got home, they set up in the dining room, spreading pictures and sample invitations over the table, desperately trying to plan everything before Labor Day. "I'm not wearing white," I tell them for the millionth time, thinking that maybe this time, they'll understand. "I'm not having you get married in a church in front of God not wearing white, Dana." "Mom, I'm almost forty! People know that I'm not a virgin!" "Dana!" She takes a deep breath, regains her composure, then looks at Ethan. "What do you think? What color should she wear?" He sits back and alternates his eyes between my scowl and my mother's lovely, icky-sweet smile. "I'd like white. It's more traditional, and it will be in a church...I just think it would look better," he says slowly. "Look better to who? Do you think that people really care?" I ask, standing up and pacing restlessly. My ass is numb, my legs are stiff, and my temper is gone. "Thank you, Ethan," my mother replies, looking at me spitefully. "You're wearing white, Dana, but you can pick out the dress yourself. I think it would be pointless to ask you to wear a train and a veil, but that's up to you." "Why am I even here? You two are doing just fine without me," I say, walking into the kitchen to get away from them. "Dana," Ethan calls after me. "You've put this off long enough. We need to get these things taken care of - it's almost September." "Maybe I don't want to get married in September." He stands quickly, his chair hitting the wall as he pushes it back. "Then what do you want?" "I want for you to listen to me and to respect my desires and opinions!" "Then tell us what you want." I want a cigarette. "I want a small service and I really don't care if it's in a church or not. Just you, me, my Mom, your parents, and Emma. Ten minutes and we're done - wear whatever the hell we want, no fancy receptions or decorations or ten mile long guest lists." I turn and face him, my eyes on fire and my cheeks flushed with anger. "That's what I want." "You're getting married in a church, Dana Katherine. Your father wouldn't stand for anything less," my mother says definitively. She's said the magic words: your father. If my father were here, I'd do what ever he wanted without question, just because he wanted it and she knows that. Bitch. "And you have to have a reception," she continues, sounding like the Goddess of Weddings. "It gives you a chance to mingle with your guests, thank them for coming. It's a celebration, Dana, you're supposed to have fun." "And the church that we'll be getting married in is very dull. We'll need to decorate it to make it look nice," Ethan adds. "I don't give a damn how it looks!" I shout, stomping back into the dining room where we've spread out lists and pictures and possible invitations and all that other crap they think we need. "All of this," I gesture at the table, "is for kids - young people without jobs or kids or ex-wives. We're adults, Ethan, and we have better things to spend our money on than this! It's ridiculous for us to have something like this!" "That's your opinion," he says calmly. "But this is my wedding, too, and this is what I want." "Why? You've already had it!" "I haven't had it with you," he says softly, walking up behind me and massaging my shoulders. "I don't understand why you don't want it. This is something to be proud of, Dana, and you act like you're ashamed to be getting married." I wince and shrug his hands away. "Is that it?" He asks. "Are you ashamed?" "No." "Then what?" He turns me around so that I'm facing him and tilts my face up to his. "Have you changed your mind?" I open my mouth to answer, but my mother does so for me. "No, Ethan, she hasn't changed her mind. She's just nervous and overwhelmed, aren't you, Dana?" "No!" I scream. "I'm tired of everyone dictating my life for me! I'm tired of people telling me what to do and telling me what's best for me! This is my life! I can do and say and think and feel any fucking thing that I want to! And I don't want this goddamn wedding! I don't want you living my life for me!" I've forgotten whether I'm talking to Ethan or to my mother, but it's appropriate for both of them. They just stare at me blankly, waiting for me to finish so that they can continue planning the wedding like nothing's happened. Frustrated and angry, I turn and leave the dining room, navigating my way up the stairs and into the bedroom, slamming the door and locking it behind me. When I don't hear any footsteps coming to check on me or any voices calling me back, I crawl into bed fully clothed and pull the covers over my head, shaking and hiccuping from trying to hold back my angry sobs. A couple of hours later, I finally hear Ethan coming up the steps and turning the knob on the bedroom door. Finding it locked, he doesn't knock, but just walks down the hall, away from me, leaving me alone. <><><><><><> A hot, steamy August day had turned into the perfect environment for rain, lightening, and thunder that night. I'd laid in bed, curled up tightly to Ethan's back for nearly an hour before I'd had to get up and do something. The lightening was bright, painting the room in an eerie golden- yellow glow for a split second before fading and leaving me to imagine all of the evils that could lurk in the shadows, waiting to come for me, to take me and test me again. I rummage through the closet, looking for something to keep them away - a weapon of some kind to protect myself with. Not finding anything, I become frantic, pulling clothes off hangers and things down from the shelves, making them crash loudly to the floor. Then, bed springs squeaking and feet shuffling across the carpet toward me. They're coming They're coming They're coming. I crawl into the farthest corner from the door and huddle against the wall, trying to melt into it. The footsteps get louder and I start sobbing and shaking. Mulder help Mulder They're coming Mulder make it stop Mulder where are you Mulder They're here Mulder help! Another crash of thunder shakes the house and I scream, burying my head in my arms and sobbing louder, whispering "Mulder, Mulder, Mulder," wondering where he is and why he isn't coming to rescue me. "Dana," I hear from the other side of the closed door. It didn't have a lock, so I'd pushed a shelf in front of it, thinking it would keep Them out. "Go away," I whisper, knowing They can't hear me and wouldn't listen even if They could. "Dana, what the hell is wrong with you?" The voice asks, angry and tired. Another sob escapes me as more thunder crashes, again vibrating the house. The shelf smashes into the floor as the door opens, a dark, lanky figure standing there, searching for me. "NO!" I scream, crying and shaking and terrified. "No, go away! Mulder, help!" "DANA!" The voice says, coming towards me. Where's my gun where's Mulder why isn't he here why isn't he helping me where is he? "MULDER!" I scream again, desperate. What if They've gotten him, too. What if They got him before They came for me? "What did you do to him? Where's Mulder? Mulder!" I ask the voice and the looming figure that it belongs to. Strong hands seize me by my shoulders, pulling me out from my corner. My training kicks in and I fight, digging my nails into its face and scrapping skin away as I drag them down its cheeks. It makes a sound of pain and I wail again, "Mulder!" It grabs me again by my wrists and I kick futilely; it drags me across the floor and out into the bedroom, slamming the closet door behind us. Then, it lets me go and walks away. I crawl towards the bed, fitting underneath it and knowing that it's bigger than I am and won't be able to follow. I put my arms over my head and sob into the floor, calling for Mulder again. He's not coming, though. He's not coming to help me. A light comes on then, spilling under the bed and making me turn my head towards the window, another rumble of thunder vibrating the house. They're all around me - no way out. They're taking me again and Mulder's not here to save me. "Dana, get out from under there," the voice yells, grabbing my ankle and yanking me towards it. "No...no, please, don't...not again, no...no..." I beg, knowing that it's pointless. My body goes limp and I give into it, letting it drag towards it, out into the light. It pins my arms above my head and I squeeze my eyes shut, turning my head away. When it straddles my body, crushing my chest, I hold my breath, hoping that it will think it killed me and just leave me alone. "Dana, open your eyes," it commands. "Dana! Open your eyes!" I hear a door squeak open, then, and a tiny, terrified voice ask, "Daddy?" I open my eyes, wondering what the hell just happened. Ethan is on top of me, his arms pinning me to the floor, blood dripping from three parallel scratches on one side of his face. Emma is standing at the door, clutching her white whale and looking at us with round, frightened eyes. "Emma, go back to bed," Ethan says over his shoulder, not taking his eyes off me. "Everything's fine, honey, just go back to bed." She does as she's told, turning away and closing the door. "What the hell is the matter with you?" he asks, loosening his grip on my wrists and moving off of me. He wipes his cheek with his arm and fresh blood pools in the scratches, replacing the old. I say nothing and lay in my prone position, panting, tears streaming from my eyes. He sits back and wipes his cheek again, then holds out his hand to me. "Get up," he says, then takes my arm and pulls me up when I refuse to move myself. He leads me into the bathroom and flips the light switch, turning on the faucet in his sink and splashing water on his face, wincing when it hits his cheek. I'm still trembling, cold, and afraid. The thunder has stopped, but the rain is still deluging the house, blocking out the sound of the air conditioner and my own sniffs and hiccups. Calmer but still angry, Ethan turns off the water and comes to stand in front of me, leaning down to look into my eyes. I look down, not wanting to meet his, and he jerks my face up again. "What happened?" He asks again, wanting an explanation. I tremble harder and stutter out, "Lightening...and th-thunder -" "Dammit, Dana, you're not a child!" He yells, making me cower away from him. "Is that why you were hiding in the closet? You're afraid of thunderstorms?" I wrap my arms tightly around my body. "Is it?" I nod furiously. He sighs and looks at his face in the mirror. The bleeding has stopped, but the scratches need to be disinfected and bandaged. His shoulders slump and he takes a deep breath. "I need to go check on Emma - I can't imagine what she thinks about this." "I'm sorry," I whisper. He nods, saying nothing, then walks out the bathroom door, leaving me alone. Not wanting to turn out the light in the bedroom, I climb back in bed and pull the covers over my head, embarrassed and still afraid of the weather outside. In a few minutes, Ethan comes back into the bedroom and turns out the light. "You okay?" He asks, sounding like he doesn't really care and reaching for me under the covers. I don't respond. "Emma's scared. She wants me to sleep in her room, so..." His voice trails off. I still don't answer. He hesitates, then I hear his feet shuffle across the carpet and out the door, closing it behind him. I finally let myself cry, terrified and alone. Not knowing what else to do, I pick up the phone beside the bed and dial the familiar numbers, bursting into tears as I hear his pre-recorded voice on the other end. It's been so long since I've heard that voice and it immediately makes me feel safer, less alone, less afraid. "Mulder," I sob into the phone. "Please, please, pick up the phone." Another sob. "Please, Mulder...Mulder, I need you. I need to talk to you, please. Pick up the phone." Nothing. "Mulder, please," I beg, openly crying, hoping that he'll take pity on me and answer. Nothing. I sniff a few times and my sobs quiet. Pressing my ear harder against the receiver, I hope that he'll pick up now, thinking that I'm about to hang up and I hold my breath, waiting. Nothing. I slowly hang up the phone, unable to believe that someone who said so honestly and openly that he loved me more than anything, someone who begged me to stay with him, to love him, would treat me so carelessly. He hates me. He always did. He was glad when I left, thought he was finally rid of me. He never wants to speak with me again. I thought I was alone before. I've never felt more alone than I do right now. <><><><><><> I never called him again. He obviously didn't want to talk to me, so I gave him what he wanted. For all I knew, he'd found someone to replace me, someone who could fill all of those voids in him that I hadn't been able to, someone that he deserved. I wouldn't interfere and I wouldn't interrupt. If he ever wanted to talk to me, he had my email address, he had my new home phone number, he had my cell phone number. He could easily find out my new home address and, if he really wanted to, he could come and visit me in person. I never forgot about him, though. I thought of him constantly. Little things that people would say, something I would see on TV or read about in the paper, a random memory or silly joke - they would all come back to me, assault me day and night, reminding me of him, how close we used to be, how much he used to care for me and how much I still cared for him. I would often find myself, late at night, picking up the phone and dialing his number, hanging up during the first ring. I would catch myself quietly chanting his name to myself for comfort during early morning thunderstorms, remembering how safe and protected he'd made me feel before by just being near me. I would look for him where ever I went, thinking that he had finally come to see me, to beg me to come back to him. He had told me once that he was free - after he'd found Samantha, he'd thought that he was finally able to move on with his life, to say good-bye to his sister, to accept her fate. Later, after his date with Alicia, I'd told him that I envied his freedom, that I could never be free from what They had done to my sister, my daughter, and me. I believed that I would be forever chasing these men - Them - trying to bring them to justice, to make them pay to what they had done to me while Mulder went off and lived his life, free of the pain and guilt that had haunted him for twenty seven years. But Mulder would never have left me. I thought that after I married Ethan and started living that normal, safe, happy life that I had wanted, every trauma and loss that I had suffered would fall away, leaving me free to move on and be happy and safe and normal. I'd told Mulder that Ethan and his daughter and his life freed me, but now I don't know how I could've been so naive. Ethan couldn't free me, Emma couldn't free me, and this life that we live couldn't free me, not just from the loss and pain, but from the person that had suffered beside me, supported me, and carried me through for eight years. I came to the conclusion that, no matter how far I ran, no matter how hard I tried, I would never be able to extract him from my life, just as I would never be able to erase all of the tragedies from my life. He and they were a part of me, as deeply ingrained in my mind as my social security number, as important to me as my cherished memories of my father. I would never be able to let Mulder go, no matter how easy it was for him to do that to me. I accepted it and moved on with my life, just as he had done. But there would always be a void there that would go unfilled, that I would guard and mourn late at night or early in the morning when the world was still and quiet, in my bed with my tears. Mulder was my safety net, my escape route. In my mind, I still pictured him at the airport, waiting to welcome me back to him, to make me a part of his life again. I'd imagined that I would always be able to run to him if things didn't work out, if my life with Ethan fell through. It made me feel safer to think of him as always waiting for me, even if it wasn't likely. The last night I called him, I just knew that he'd pick up the phone this time, when I needed him the most, and tell me to hang on, that he'd be there by sunrise. He'd do anything that I asked, if he'd just picked up the phone. But he didn't. I eventually came to realize that he wasn't going to be my escape route anymore. He wasn't going to wait for me to come back to him. He was moving on with his life and leaving me behind and, not having any other option, I gave up on wondering if I'd done the right thing by leaving him and contented myself with my new life, exactly what I'd said I'd wanted. I continued to tell Ethan that I wanted a small service, just my mother, Emma, and his parents. He disagreed and one day when Emma and I returned from soccer practice, every family in the neighborhood plus our families were in our living room and kitchen, shouting surprise, pouring wine, and handing me gifts. He and my mother had planned it all, thinking that I would be flattered and overwhelmed, that I would love the surprise. On Saturday, September second of the year two-thousand, I officially became Mrs. Ethan Minette at a large Catholic church near our house with our families and his co-workers all present to witness it. Bill gave me away, beaming the entire time. He'd told me before the wedding that Ethan would be good for me. While we were making the guest list, Ethan casually asked me if I wanted to invite Mulder. I didn't answer, just locked myself in the bathroom for an hour, sobbing, while he pounded on the door, demanding that I let him in. When I finally emerged, Ethan asked me what was wrong. I told him that it was just stress and yes, that I would like to invite Mulder. I made out the invitation, my hand shaking as I wrote his name in the slowest, neatest cursive script I could manage. See, Mulder? How well I'm doing without you? How easily I've moved on and forgot about you? Almost as easily as you moved on and forgot about me. The day I mailed the invitations, I stood with his in my hand beside the oversized blue mail box at the post office. I couldn't bring myself to drop it in. I guess a part of me thought that it was spiteful and cruel to invite the man who said he was irrevocably in love with me to the eternal joining ceremony between me and another man. I still held onto hope the he loved me. I put the envelope into my purse and, when I got home, I stuck it in my bed side drawer along with the nameplate that he had given me. As I walked down the aisle on my brother's arm, I searched for Mulder in the crowd of people, thinking that he had found out about the wedding somehow and that he wouldn't let me go through with it. I pictured him bursting in during the service, as the priest asked if anyone objected to Ethan and me being married, seizing me and taking me away with him, wherever he was going. I held my breath during the long silence, certain that, at any moment, he would come for me, but he didn't. The closest thing Ethan and I ever got to a honeymoon was a night in Atlanta's most expensive hotel. Emma stayed with friends and Ethan made slow, sweet love to me, pouring his soul into me each time. After he'd fallen asleep, I dialed Mulder's number one last time, listened to his voice on his answering machine, then hung up, went into the bathroom, turned on the shower, and cried until the water turned cold. Afterwards, Ethan returned to work and I learned to stifle myself, to sacrifice myself, to always agree with and support his decisions and opinions. I got used to my life as a house wife, feeling smothered and bored and empty, reminding myself daily that what I was doing was important - providing Emma with a stable, dependable mother figure, making and keeping a nice home for my family. I cleaned house every week, made sure supper was on the table when Ethan got home at night, and went quietly insane. Ethan worked a lot, his schedule always changing to accommodate the odd hours and weekends they needed him for, but he always told me that he loved me and held me close to him every night as he fell asleep, always kissed me before he left every morning. I was lonely with only my shallow, simple, gossiping fellow housewives and neighbors for companionship. I was sometimes jealous of the younger ones, announcing their pregnancies to everyone, beaming with pride and expectation. I still felt empty, still felt that, in a way, I was letting Ethan down by not being able to give him that. He never said anything to me about it, though, and I never said anything to him. It was my happy, perfect, fulfilling domestic life, only without the happiness, perfection, and fulfillment. It was exactly as I'd imagined my life would've been if I had married him eight years ago, like the eight years that we'd spent apart hadn't happened at all. <><><>End Part 3<><><> Notes: This is NOT the end of this series, so don't get too depressed. I never would've imagined it would be this long and I have no idea how much longer it will be, but please stick with it and let me know what you think. The Vent really is a section in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. It's so named because you can call a number or send an email complaining (or venting) about whatever displeases you. Back at the beginning of season eight, a vent was published that asked, "Am I the only one looking for Mulder?" Thanks: to my wonderful betas RealB, Karri, and Liam, who constantly reassure me when I'm having an "I suck" day and who gently stalk me the rest of the time. Feedback: PLEASE!!! lil_gusty@hotmail.com