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I Still Have Plans to Go to Mexico II
by JiM


Three Men in a Boat

What do you mean he fell off a roof?!"

Alex was almost grateful that Skinner was still unconscious. Mulder sounded like he was about to go up in smoke and there was a dangerous quaver hovering just below his words. Better that Mulder didn't get swamped by the same gnawing fear that had gripped Alex when he'd gotten the call from the paramedics who'd transported Skinner. Alex decided on a tried and true method to distract Mulder and keep him from panicking; he set out out piss him off.

"Which word didn't you get, Mulder?" he drawled. "Skinner fell off a roof."

It worked. He could hear Mulder's teeth grinding from two thousand miles away. "Look, you sorry son of a bitch, just tell me what's wrong with him and stop playing games!" But Mulder's voice had regained its strength; he knew instinctively that Alex wouldn't tease him if it were truly serious. As a burst of static temporarily cut Mulder off, Alex privately wished that he knew that Skinner's condition weren't serious, but he preferred to deal with one crisis at a time. He wanted Mulder kept on an even keel until they knew for certain whether their lover was ever going to wake up.

"He's fine, Mulder," Alex lied through his teeth. "A bit banged up, his head hurts, but otherwise, he's fine. The doctor's in with him now."

Skinner had been inspecting a leaking roof with its owner when the other man had slipped. Skinner had grabbed for him, saving him with a sort of twisting dive and had wound up flipping himself off the steeply pitched roof onto the ground fifteen feet below. While the burlap-wrapped rose bushes beneath had broken his fall, he had been unconscious for over an hour now and had needed artificial resuscitation on the scene. Fortunately, the owner of the roof was one of Skinner's EMT buddies and had dealt competently with the emergency. But Skinner still hadn't regained consciousness.

"I'm on my way home," Mulder's voice came crackling back suddenly as Alex watched yet another nurse disappear behind the curtained exam cubicle in where Skinner was lying, pale and silent.

"Good. How long will it take you?" He heard Mulder mumbling, then snarling, at someone in the background before his voice came back on. He definitely sounded pissed now.

"Two days."

"Where the hell are you?!"

"Chiapas. Don't ask. I'll be there as soon as I can." There was another burst of static. "Look, Alex, the satellite is moving out of range here and it's raining like nothing else on earth right now. Tell Walt..." Mulder's voice faded away, but Alex knew it had nothing to do with the communications satellite.

"I know. I'll tell him. Just come home." And Alex broke the connection before either of them could get any more maudlin. He shoved his cell phone in his pocket and slouched against the wall, scowling at anyone who looked his way. He knew exactly what he looked like—hard, dirty, dangerous—a man with nothing to lose. One or two of Walt's fellow EMT's hovered around the periphery of his attention, but they were too bewildered by his transformation to approach him more than once.

If he tried, he could picture Mulder as he probably looked right at this moment—tightly focused, rigidly in control, the very air around him humming with concentration as he devoted everything in him toward getting to Skinner's side as quickly as possible. Neither Mulder nor Alex were in any doubt as to what would happen if he were suddenly gone from their lives. Skinner was their anchor, their keystone. Alex suddenly thought that, if he were able, he would pray. Instead, all he could do was stare fixedly at those damned blue emergency room curtains and wait.


It took him a few moments to register the doctor standing in front of him. The man looked him up and down doubtfully, then asked again, "Mr. Corcoran? You're here for Mr. Skinner?"

At Alex's terse nod, the doctor consulted the paperwork in his hand and looked even more doubtful. "Mr. Skinner's emergency contact is listed as a Mr. Fox Mulder..."

"Mulder's my brother; he's traveling in rural Mexico, doctor. I contacted him and he's on his way home, but it could take as much as two days. I have his power of attorney. What is Mr. Skinner's condition?" Alex forced himself to speak calmly, slipping on his CPA persona, even though it jarred badly with his current state of mind and dress.

"Mr. Skinner is beginning to come around..." Which was all he got the opportunity to say before Alex had slipped around him and behind that hated blue curtain.

Skinner was lying flat and unmoving, face nearly green under the harsh fluorescent lights. Without his glasses, he seemed more vulnerable, unprotected. There were scratches on his face and across the back of the hand that Alex gripped tightly in his own.

"Talk to him, Mr. Corcoran. Try to get him to respond to you. He's been out a while and may be confused or even have a bit of memory loss." The doctor had come to stand on the other side of the bed.

"Skinner? Come on, Skinner. Come on out of it. Shake it off. Open your eyes, Walt. If you're not awake when Mulder gets here, he'll shoot me this time for sure." Alex had no idea how inconsistent his low crooning was with his torn t-shirt, the battered leather jacket or the stained jeans he'd been wearing for a week now. He ignored the doctor's dubious look and bent lower, speaking gently into Skinner's ear, breath catching as Skinner started to stir.

Skinner's eyelids flickered open, then squeezed shut as the bright light assaulted them. The doctor turned off the glaring examination light hanging over the bed and spoke.

"Mr. Skinner, can you open your eyes?" He waited until Skinner's eyes opened again and fixed dazedly on him, then said, "Mr. Skinner? Do you know where you are?"

"Hospital?" Skinner guessed hoarsely, eyes blinking rapidly.

"Good! And do you know who this is?" The doctor stood back and pulled Alex closer to the bed.

"Krycek."

Oh shit. Alex's hand tightened reflexively on Skinner's. He'd forgotten. Skinner had forgotten the damned cover story he himself had put in place and insisted on them all using. Neither he nor Mulder ever called Alex 'Krycek', except for very rare occasions in bed together. The Corcoran name and cover story had been drilled into them until Skinner was satisfied that there would be no slip ups.

The Gunmen had created a beautiful electronic trail that led straight to an obvious covert ops sealed file which, should anyone care to breach their reasonable security precautions, held an impressive file of Major Corcoran's nonexistent accomplishments and all of Alex Krycek's actual personal data, right down to his retinal print and gene codes. Skinner had masterminded the entire operation and Alex had been deeply touched by the painstaking care taken to safeguard him. And now the man who'd crafted it had forgotten... what else had he forgotten?

"No, Mr. Skinner. This is Mr. Corcoran. Do you remember him?" The doctor prompted, shining a penlight in first one, then the other of Skinner's eyes.

"Not dressed like that he's not. Krycek," Skinner insisted muzzily and Alex wanted to laugh aloud. Instead, he just gripped Skinner's hand tighter and was profoundly reassured by the answering squeeze he got.

At the doctor's questioning look, Alex said, "It's an old... nickname. He knows who I am. He's fine." Then he had to laugh in relief.

"Where's Mulder?" Skinner mumbled.

"Chiapas."

"What the hell's he doing there?" the man in the bed asked irritably and batted at the doctor's hand as his ears were peered into.

"You tell me, Walt. I leave town for two weeks and suddenly he's chasing little green men in Mexico and you're taking swan dives off of roofs."

"Gray." Skinner's eyes closed as the doctor took his blood pressure in the arm which Alex wasn't gripping. "Little gray men," he clarified. Then his eyes opened again and fixed on Alex. "What are you doing here? You're supposed to be... out there," he finished lamely, eyebrows knitting with the effort of thinking around his concussion.

Exactly the question Alex hadn't wanted to answer and knew he would have to when he arrived back home three weeks earlier than he'd ever returned before. Four years it had been going on now. Four years since he'd come to live in the big house set down in the dunes of Eastham. Four years since he'd become Alex Corcoran, CPA, member of the Lighthouse Restoration Committee, the Chamber of Commerce, the Businessmen's Association, treasurer of the Hatch Foundation, Mulder's half brother and Skinner and Mulder's lover. Four years in which, every autumn, he'd disappear for over a month, sometimes longer. 'Alex Corcoran' would be left behind as easily as his wardrobe and Alex would again be someone very different, someone who knew how to move through the darkest shadows without coming to grief, someone who relished the world beyond the place where the sidewalks ended.

Skinner and Mulder had accepted his need to escape every once in a while. Mulder even made jokes about it and misquoted Kipling's Just So Stories at him, calling him "The Rat Who Walked By Himself". Mulder and Skinner pretended not to worry about him as he left and Alex pretended not to notice their distress. He no longer doubted his welcome home, when he washed up unkempt and oddly refreshed by his wanderings. He enjoyed bringing back peculiar artifacts and letting Skinner and Mulder guess where he'd been.

Skinner would patch his minor wounds and Mulder would look carefully into his eyes until he saw the balance restored and then everything would return to normal for a while. Until he needed that next walk into the wild.

But this time, not unlike last year's foray, Alex had become aware of something nagging at him even as he walked carelessly through some of the most unsavory and free zones in the world. He had become aware of the ties that bound him here, to this little town on Cape Cod. After a few days, he had become aware that he did not resent those ties. And then one cold, dusty day in Samarkhand, he had found himself suddenly turning around in the market place and heading for home, weeks ahead of schedule. He had stared out the dirt-caked window of the bus that carried him back along the Silk Road and realized that this had been his last "Walk By Himself". Three days later, he had walked through the kitchen door of the empty house on the dunes to hear the phone ringing, telling him that Skinner lay unconscious, perhaps dying, in the hospital.

"I came home," Alex said lamely. Skinner only smiled, eyes closed again.

"Good," he said, then appeared to fall asleep.

One CAT scan, a battery of tests, a knee brace, a set of crutches and one overnight observation later, Alex Corcoran was able to take a very grouchy Walter Skinner home.

Alex was leaning against the doorjamb, watching Skinner dress. He kept turning Skinner's gun over and over in his hand, wrapped in its plastic personal effects bag. The emergency room staff had bagged it along with Skinner's ring, watch, wallet and Swiss Army knife. It had left a bruise the size of Alex's hand in the small of Skinner's back. Alex's lip curled. Careful Skinner always went armed, even when he was slaloming down some other joker's roof. He wanted to laugh. Or shake the man until his teeth rattled.

Skinner had been tersely polite to the nursing staff and barely civil to Alex, who had sat by his bedside, brought him fresh clothes and his spare set of glasses and a cup of the best French Roast the local coffee place had to offer this morning. Alex finally lost his temper; he was suffering from jet lag, lack of sleep, a disquieting new knowledge about himself, and the after effects of worrying about the man who was currently complaining about the amount of cream in his coffee.

"What the hell is your problem, Skinner?"

The other man had looked up from struggling to pull his jeans over his knee brace. One side of his mouth had twisted up. "I don't like hospitals."

"No one does," Alex reminded him.

"And waking up in a hospital to see you hanging around... well, it brings back some unpleasant memories." Skinner's head had dropped and he was staring at the bulky brace on his knee as if it were a challenge he simply wasn't up to.

Shit. Whatever else you could say about Walter Skinner, he told the truth. Even if it was deep-frozen and came with sharp edges. Like that one. The reminder that Alex had once held Skinner's life in a palm-top computer, had played with it as if it were a video game... it wasn't a memory he was proud of. Skinner might have excused him, but he hadn't forgotten and what man could forgive that? Alex knew he was overtired when he started to open his mouth to say... what? Something foolish, no doubt.

Instead, he shoved the gun in his pocket, crossed the room and knelt down. There was a sharp ripping sound as he loosened the velcro straps of the brace and took it off. Then, carefully cradling the sprained knee in his hand, he drew Skinner's jeans up over the swollen joint. Skinner pulled his pants up the rest of the way, then Alex carefully pulled the splint on over the jeans, retightening it after smoothing the denim beneath it. He handed Skinner his crutches and said,

"Let's get out of here."

And Skinner, knowing Alex better than either man thought, nodded and said,

"Let's go home, Krycek."

The drive home was silent. So was the slow journey from the driveway into the house, where Skinner let Alex take his coat and hang it up for him. Skinner didn't even speak to his dog, who capered around them joyfully. He merely reached down, leaning heavily on his crutches, patted the animal on the head and made his way slowly upstairs, Alex trailing behind him.

In the bedroom, Skinner stood, seemingly unable to decide what to do next. Alex gently pushed him toward the bed, making him sit down so he could take Skinner's shoes off. Out of the corner of his eye, Alex could see the other man's studiously blank expression and knew that he was hating the fact that he needed help. So Alex forbore teasing and went to get a glass of water.

Alex came back and handed it to Skinner, along with a Percodan. He felt a touch of unease when Skinner merely took the tablet and swallowed it without comment. This was the man who had to be browbeaten and, on one memorable occasion last spring, wrestled into taking cold tablets? Skinner sat, shoulders slumped, staring at the half-empty glass of water in his hand. When Alex gently took it from him, he said tonelessly,

"I think I'd like to sleep for a while."

Four years and Alex had never seen Skinner so subdued. He was often quiet, a self-contained and restrained man, but he had never before seemed faded, as he did now. It was unnerving.

Alex slid his arm under Skinner's legs and helped to swing them onto the bed. While Skinner took off his glasses, Alex pulled the quilt over him, arranging it gently over the splinted knee. After a moment's thought, he carefully positioned two pillows under the swollen joint and got a half-smile of thanks. Mulder's huge cat came stalking up the bed to investigate. After sniffing thoroughly, Maxie touched his nose to Skinner's, then deliberately curled up against the large man's ribs and began to purr.

"Sleep, Walt."

Skinner nodded, eyes already closed. Trying not to notice how pale the older man was, Alex brushed his fingers across the scratched forehead and got a fractional smile in reply. Then Skinner seemed to drop into sleep. Alex silently replaced Skinner's gun in the bedside table, then went downstairs in search of fortitude. The best he could do at 11 o'clock in the morning was a cup of very strong coffee and endless minutes spent on the phone, waiting for the satellite service to find Mulder's signal, somewhere on the planet. After twenty minutes of insipid hold music, he gave up in disgust.

He was being an idiot, he told himself. It was ridiculous. Skinner had merely been knocked unconscious and had a concussion and a sprain. He'd had worse before. Hell, Krycek had inflicted worse on him before this, and he'd sprung back every time. There was, he told himself, no reason for the mother- hen routine he was pulling.

None, he mentally insisted, as he settled himself in the armchair beside the window in Mulder and Skinner's bedroom. "No reason at all," he growled under his breath, opening a book that had been on the night table on Skinner's side of the bed. To demonstrate his perfect unconcern, he propped his feet up on the windowsill and began reading at the bookmark, glancing up at the sleeper at the end of every page.

###

It was the choked noise that woke him finally. Skinner knew he wasn't going to enjoy being awake as various parts of his body began checking in and letting him know exactly how badly they'd been treated. His head was pounding and he vaguely hoped it was the forerunner of a killer stroke. Any number of muscles were yelping accompaniment to the dull throbbing fire in his left knee. "Oh, shit," he murmured, slowly remembering what had happened. Maxie got up and sat beside his shoulder, offering an interrogative chirp. There was a stirring, then Alex came and leaned over him. The two sets of green eyes peering questioningly at him made him chuckle roughly, then groan as the vibrations seemed to pluck at every abused fiber in his back and side.

"How do you feel?"

"Wasted and miserable. I didn't know it was possible to feel this bad and still be this strung out. I hate Percodan." Strangely enough, his bitching seemed to reassure Alex and the other man began to look more cheerful as he asked,

"What do you want?"

"Bathroom, water and a bullet, right between the eyes."

Alex laughed at the mordant tone and helped him to haul himself upright and drag himself into the bathroom. Then he poured three glasses of water into him before steering him back to bed. Since it was now after one o'clock, Alex decided it was time for him to eat and ignored any feeble protests that Skinner made. He disappeared downstairs to fix a tray before Skinner could at least get him to bring his book back from where he'd left it across the room.

So instead, Skinner lay there and considered the watery gray light on the ceiling and the patterns it made. Then he spent some time counting the cat's whiskers and remembering how much he hated narcotics and wondering whether or not he could take another painkiller before he chewed his throbbing leg off in desperation. Jesus, being shot hadn't hurt this much, had it?

Alex came back with a bowl of stew and another Percodan, which he swallowed eagerly. Alex had settled back into the armchair across the room, his own lunch untouched on the windowsill beside him.

"You OK?" Skinner asked, startling the other man out of his reverie.

"Yeah, Walt, I'm fine. I haven't fallen off of anything recently." Skinner noted the snide tone and wondered what Alex was covering up.

"You're home early," he said conversationally, testing the waters. Yup, that was it, he thought, as he watched Krycek's shoulders tense another fraction.

"Ran out of money," Alex said shortly.

"You have a platinum card," Skinner reminded him, putting aside his half-eaten bowl. Alex merely shrugged and Skinner studied his sullen profile for a few minutes before asking,

"What were you reading when I woke up?"

"Nothing."

Skinner wondered if Alex knew what a bad liar he'd become. "Looks like my book. Can I have it?"

Alex grabbed the book, brought it over to him, then grabbed the dirty dishes and strode jerkily out of the room before Skinner could say another word. Feeling the Percodan kicking in again, Skinner let the book flop open to the page Krycek had been reading before he'd left it face down on the windowsill when Skinner had awakened. He read no more than a few lines before he guessed what had caused Krycek's full-scale retreat.

/Let your boat of life be light, packed with only what you need—a homely home and simple pleasures, one or two friends worth the name, someone to love and someone to love you, a cat, a dog, and a pipe or two, enough to eat and enough to wear, and a little more than enough to drink.../

When he recalled the title, he wanted to chuckle again, but he remembered how little he'd enjoyed the results last time. "Three Men in a Boat". Right. If Jerome Jerome could see this carnival funhouse reflection of domestic peace, the man would be spinning in his grave. Skinner couldn't help it; he laughed aloud and put up with the resultant twinges and aches.

He sobered as he realized that Alex was going through yet another crisis of... what? Faith? Self-discovery? Identity? The former assassin had been remarkably stable, given his past, other than his annual voyages of self occlusion. Skinner had never been in any doubt as to what Alex was doing when he left them; he was protecting the last wild corner of himself from them and their perniciously domestic influence. Mulder counseled space and quiet for Krycek, so Skinner had followed his lead and they had never asked, tailed or pressed Alex for details. And Alex had continued to disappear for over a month every year... until now.

Skinner's head was aching more than before it seemed, so he decided to stop thinking about the problem until he and Mulder could hash it through together. Which started him wondering where his lover was and why he hadn't heard from him and he fell asleep before he was able to even consider reaching for the bedside phone.

###

Alex spent the afternoon fending off Skinner's well-wishers and wondering where the hell Mulder was. Barbara Hatch sent an entire gourmet catered meal to help "dear Walter" keep up his strength. Despite her very real respect for them all, she remained deeply convinced that none of the three men, ex-FBI agents or not, were actually capable of looking after themselves. Apparently, most of the volunteer fire department members and their neighbors were equally persuaded—cakes, chicken soup, fresh-baked bread and other provender kept appearing at the door, held by gruff, weatherbeaten EMT's and firemen, fishermen and craftsfolk. After twelve well-wishing calls in twenty minutes, Alex just unplugged the phone and dropped onto the couch in weary amazement.

Neighbors. Friends. Social contacts. How had they become so... normal? Skinner was very popular in his own quiet way, a gentle, courteous man with a no-nonsense attitude—the natives loved him and respected his reserve, so like their own. Mulder was so quirky and harmless and brilliant that they loved him, too. Everyone loves an exuberant eccentric and highly successful writer; he added local color without adding to the local police blotter. But the very fact that he, Alex, knew all these people by name, that these cheerfully normal people all asked after him and seemed genuinely concerned when they saw his drawn features, for once lacking his trademark sharp grin...

For four years, Alex had had a great deal of fun playing the persona of 'Alex Corcoran', Mulder's half-brother and model citizen. He had enjoyed dressing the part of an upscale New England professional and he had managed a number of investment portfolios into some very healthy financial ground, his own, Skinner's and Mulder's among them. He had attended the appropriate social functions, become a member of the correct business entities and fraternities and had even developed a respectable handicap at golf.

He had enjoyed his other role as Mulder and Skinner's secret lover, as well. While one or two close associates suspected that there was something unusual in their domestic arrangements, most of their circle of acquaintance had taken him at face value and industriously threw every single woman of marriageable age at him. The more canny among them also pushed eligible bachelors at him, but he had gently turned away all prospects, hinting darkly at some great romantic tragedy in his past.

All of which allowed him to occasionally share Mulder and Skinner's bed without worrying about bringing someone else's medical history or psychopathology into the equation. He knew that Mulder would prefer to have him beside them every night, but he kept his own room, needing to have some place of retreat for himself.

Sometimes, Mulder would come to him deep in the night; he had learned not to fear those times of silent communion, shattering as they could be. Rarer still, but no less sweet, those times when Skinner came to him alone, sharing his own darkness with the one who could understand it best. Most treasured, the riotous times when the three of them would love one another into exhaustion, two of them ganging up on the third, laughing alliances shifting with a single stroke, a hard kiss. That, too, was Alex Corcoran's life.

'Corcoran' was a mask, protective coloration, as much as his 'Krycek' or 'Arntzen' identities had been. But neither of those men had ever had the solid, peaceful, smoothly timbred life that 'Alex Corcoran' enjoyed. Hell, loved. He wondered if he wasn't actually becoming Alex Corcoran, going so deeply into the role that there would be nothing left of himself. And that terrified him.

He was still slumped on the couch, considering the cosmic joke of his life, when Mulder walked through the front door three hours later. Alex was so relieved and delighted to see him that he said the first thing that rose from his heart.

"Where the hell have you been?!? Do you ever turn your damned cell phone on?!"

Then he seized the rumpled-looking Mulder and kissed him hard, pouring out all his fear and need and desire into Mulder's mouth. When he finally let them both come up for air, it was to find Mulder's dazed eyes fixed on him, a goofy smile lurking on his lips as he said vaguely,

"Hi, honey, I'm home..."

"Walt's fine," Alex said before Mulder could ask. "He's upstairs, asleep."

Mulder's grin was dawn over the ocean and his next kiss was pure glory.

They sorted themselves out after a few minutes and Alex's hands had cataloged the fact that Mulder hadn't been eating too well, had some new bruises, and a long shallow scratch across his ribs. He also smelled like a swamp. In fact, he had a fair amount of dried mud on him, one way and another.

"What happened to you?"

"There was a flood... we were almost cut off when the river overflowed the banks. That's what happened to my phone. And half the equipment."

"So how'd you get here?" Alex asked, running his fingers through Mulder's gritty hair and grimacing at the residue.

"I... um, chartered a jet when I got to Mexico City."

Alex whistled silently as Mulder started up the stairs. "That's got to have cost you a small fortune."

"You," Mulder's voice floated back down to him.

"'Me', what?"

"It cost you a fortune. I used your Platinum Card."

"Mulder!" And Alex chased the prodigal up the stairs.

But when he got to the bedroom door, he skidded to a halt, revenge forgotten in the tableau before him. Mulder was kneeling beside the bed, face hidden against Skinner's side, arms thrown around the big man. Skinner's hands were moving gently over Mulder's hair and shoulders and he was speaking very softly. Alex could see Mulder nod sometimes, but he kept his face hidden. It should have looked childish; it should have been ridiculous. Instead, Alex felt his lips trembling and his eyes filling and he stepped away from the doorway to lean against the wall in the hallway and regain some control of himself. Hadn't he elected himself the one who didn't fall apart for once, leaving that luxury to Mulder, who had propped him up through too many sleepless nights?

He heard the rumble of Skinner's voice answering some muffled question of Mulder's. "I'm glad you're home. Alex has been great, but I'm glad you're home, too." Warm feeling, hearing that "too", knowing that they were all home to one another. He silently blessed Skinner for that, then wanted to strangle the man in the next instant when he heard him laugh ruefully and say,

"Yeah, I did it this time, Fox. Knocked myself out for four or five hours and managed to stop breathing for a bit. The doctor was sure I was sliding into a coma. He said poor Alex almost put him through a wall when they told him I was coming out of it."

Oh shit. He hadn't had a chance to explain to Skinner what he'd told Mulder, and, more importantly, what he hadn't told him. He saw the set of Mulder's shoulders and knew he was in deep trouble. Stepping into the room, he said placatingly,

"Mulder..."

And then the other man was off his knees and had him slammed up against the doorframe. Alex's head smacked the wood and the room went remote for a moment before he could focus on the hard pressure of Mulder's arm on his windpipe and the furious hissing in his face. Oh good—deja vu.

"You son of a bitch! You lied to me. You said he was fine and all the time you knew he wasn't!!"

"Mulder..." Alex choked, wondering if this would be the time he just let loose and coldcocked Mulder.

Mulder grabbed his shirt front in both hands and bounced him back against the wall again. Apparently not, Alex thought again as he felt the molding digging into his spine. "You lied to me!" Mulder spit. His eyes were blazing and Alex could still see the faint swelling where he'd gently bitten Mulder's lip when they'd kissed just a few moments ago.

There was a low rumbling noise in the room which Alex dimly identified as Skinner's voice. He just kept staring at that deep red spot on Mulder's lip. Skinner's voice got stronger, and the words finally penetrated.

"I guess you can take the boy out of the abusive relationship but not the abuse out of the boy, eh, Mulder?" Skinner's voice was cool and precise, like a surgeon who knew exactly where to cut. Mulder's hands dropped away and he stared at Alex. Alex stared back for a moment, fingered the lump rising on the back of his head, then shoved Mulder out of the way and walked out of the room.

"I need some ice."

Behind him, he heard their voices; Mulder's, grating and hesitant, Skinner's deep and reassuring. He answered neither of them as he went downstairs for an ice pack and a drink.

Home, indeed.

###

"He was trying to help, Mulder. He didn't want you to worry."

"He lied to me!"

"Of course he did." Skinner sounded tired suddenly and Mulder knew it was because they had crossed and recrossed this ground in the past four years; usually, it was Mulder explaining Alex Krycek's rather unusual pathology to the reflexively honest Skinner. "It's what he does. And telling you the truth at that moment wouldn't have done a bit of good. You know that."

After a moment, Mulder nodded. He did know that. He also knew that he would have done exactly the same thing in Alex's place. But that didn't help dampen the flare of rage he had felt; it was old, left over from the many betrayals and lies. He hated that these wounds still lurked beneath the surface of his conscious mind, like land mines waiting for a stray thought to detonate him into the old violence again. Worst of all, he hated that it was usually Alex who would trigger the blasts.

"He doesn't lie to us without a good reason, Mulder."

"Or for fun," Mulder added dryly.

"But never about the important things," Skinner insisted, shifting restlessly against the headboard.

"Walt, you nearly died yesterday—that's important!" Mulder rearranged the pillows under Skinner's wounded leg.

"Fox, he knows you." Skinner's voice was very gentle.

Mulder scratched Maxie's ears as he pulled the bunched up quilt out from under the cat, then arranged it over Skinner. Finally he said, not looking up, "I know. I just hate being protected."

Finally, they had reached the root of the problem. Skinner leaned his head back and closed his eyes in gratitude. Every once in a while, he wondered if his life wouldn't be calmer if he'd just pursued his original retirement plan of becoming an alcoholic beach hermit instead of investing years in navigating the uncharted emotional wilderness of either one of his younger lovers. And himself, he added, as Mulder's fingers brushed down the side of his face. Calmer, yes, but then who would look at him like that? Would there be anyone to kneel beside him, to hold him tightly, to whisper half-heard words of love and need, as Mulder was doing now?

Calm is over-rated, he reminded himself, letting his lips brush against Mulder's dirty hair. "Go on," he said aloud. He felt Mulder sigh, the watched him unfold himself stiffly.

"If you hear shots downstairs...," Mulder said from the doorway.

"I'll assume the status quo has been restored."

Mulder gave a half grin, then left Skinner to ruffle the cat's fur and appreciate the fact that Maxie had no outstanding issues beyond his constant need to drink out of the water glass beside the bed.


When Mulder trailed into the kitchen, Alex was making dinner, a half-empty glass of scotch beside him on the counter.

"Alex..."

Alex pivoted around him and reached for the cucumbers.

"Forget it, Mulder. At least you didn't pull a gun on me this time."

Mulder passed him the vegetables and grimaced. "Lost it in the river. Another Glock bites the dust. The insurance company is gonna love this claim."

"I'm surprised they don't have you nationally blacklisted." Alex handed him the salad bowl and a knife. Mulder reached out and froze Alex with a single touch on his wrist. Their eyes met and they looked steadily at one another, then Mulder cocked his head. Alex nodded once.

And everything was back to normal.

###

So normal, in fact, that after eating the gourmet meal Barbara Hatch had sent and playing two games of chess with Skinner, then maneuvering him back up to bed and tucking Mulder in next to him, all without hearing Mulder's voice once, Alex had gone to his own room and set his internal clock for a two hour nap. He had awakened at around 1 am, as planned, and pulled on his jeans and a sweatshirt. Then he went down the hall and looked in on Skinner. The man was sleeping deeply, with the dog and cat for company, but no Mulder. Alex grinned and awarded himself two points for knowing Mulder as well as he did, then went downstairs. No Mulder in the kitchen or living room. So he went out onto the porch. The boards were cold under his bare feet, but he didn't go back in to get shoes.

Jackpot.

Mulder was leaning on the railing, staring off at the ocean, silvered by the moonlight, the distant sound of waves on the beach louder than the breath that steamed in the still night air. He was also standing there shirtless, wearing only his jeans—idiot!—so Alex came up behind him and wrapped his arms around the chilled flesh. He rested his cheek on Mulder's shoulder and waited. After a few moments, one of Mulder's hands came up to rest on his forearm where it lay across his chest. After another wait, during which Alex was sure his feet had frozen to the porch, Mulder took a deep breath and spoke.

"Alex, I'm sorry."

Alex awarded himself another two points for knowing that these would be Mulder's first words. Mulder must have felt him grin, because he shifted restively and growled, "What are you laughing at?"

"You," Alex said and hugged him a little tighter. "You're such a source of stability, Mulder. I always know what you'll do."

"What the hell are you talking about?"

Alex grinned again, pleased. Mulder no longer sounded angst-ridden, he sounded annoyed. That was much better, in Alex's opinion, even though his hand no longer rested on Alex's arm.

"I find it very comforting to know that you'll occasionally get so pissed at me that you'll snap, we'll revert to our old patterns, then you'll wallow in guilt for two or three days."

"I'm glad I'm so predictable." Mulder's voice was icier than the air.

"It is one of your many charms," Alex agreed, and began to nuzzle at one goose-pimpled shoulder. He could feel Mulder's muscles vibrating with tension; the man's hands were gripping the railing until they were skeletal in the moonlight.

"I hate that I do that, just like He did."

There was no doubt in Alex's mind who 'He' was. Bill Mulder, alcoholic, might not have been Mulder's biological father, but Mulder was his son and bore the psychological scars to prove it. Once again, Alex was mildly pleased that he had been the one to remove Bill Mulder from the world and prevented him from inflicting any more harm on his nominal son.

"Mulder..." Alex said soothingly.

The other man shrugged out of Alex's arms and spun to face him, face shadowed, his eyes glittering in the uncertain light. "I lost it and tried to put you through a wall. That's no more or less than spousal abuse."

"I could have stopped you at any time." The words were flat, cool and unconcerned. They were also absolutely true.

"That's not the point! I lashed out at you in anger and you just took it—that's the definition of spouse abuse, for god's sake!"

Well. Alex gave Mulder three points for coming up with a new variation on an old refrain. Spouse abuse. He couldn't help it, he started chuckling.

"I'm serious, damn it!"

The man was so beautiful when he was so angry, so tortured, so wrong. Alex loved him more than he understood, all those twists and turns and intuitive leaps of logic that no one else could ever hope to predict.

"I know you are, Mulder. It's just that I don't think those definitions really work for us." He saw Mulder begin to draw breath to argue with him held up a hand. "It's just that who we are, what we've been and who we've become... they're so far from normal that I don't think you can use the standard definitions. You're beating yourself up over deviating from a societal norm that we couldn't even hope to achieve." He couldn't help it, he started to snicker again.

"So you're saying it's OK for me to lose it and slam you around occasionally because we're so fucked up that it's actually a sign of improved mental health?"

"Basically, yeah." Moving cautiously, Alex stepped closer to Mulder and slowly took him into his arms.

"What the hell have you been reading—Masochists Anonymous?"

"Azerbaijani train schedules. They leave you a lot of time to think."

"I'm sorry," Mulder whispered into his hair after a time.

"I know. I'm sorry that I had to lie to you."

"You'd do it again, wouldn't you?"

Alex didn't even bother to answer. He ran his hand over Mulder's marble-cold back and waited. In another moment, it came.

"Alex, do we have to stand out here any more? I'm freezing," in just the right tone of aggrieved that suggested that it had all been Alex's idea that they have their soul-search out here in the cold instead of the someplace warmer that Mulder would have chosen.

The balance restored, the evening's total score up to six points, Alex cheerfully resisted smacking Mulder's shivering ass. He steered him inside, back upstairs, stripped him then tucked him into his own bed before curling up around Mulder and stroking his hair until the tremors stopped. They fell asleep with no more words between them.

###

Skinner was healing rapidly. He didn't need the Percodan after two days and the doctor was amazed at his recovery rate. "Amazing for a man of your age," she said heartily, well-pleased with her patient's progress.

Alex and Mulder were less pleased. One week after his accident and Skinner was up and around on his crutches, working on small pieces in his shop and nearly non-verbal. He would reply to direct queries or when challenged but was otherwise silent. More disturbing still, he had stopped touching either Mulder or Alex, except in the most perfunctory ways. He would endure their caresses but seemed more annoyed than soothed as they attempted to cosset and pet him. He was brooding about something but neither of the other two could discover it. Tempers got touchier as their consternation grew.

The night Skinner asked them both to sleep in Alex's room was the final straw.

###

Mulder was sitting in the window seat, staring out at the Hunter's Moon which hung low and full over the dunes. Alex had thrown himself back onto the bed and was frowning ferociously at the ceiling. A chill wind was hissing around the eaves of the house.

"We can't go on like this."

"And we can't shoot him," Alex pointed out.

"Tempting, but no," Mulder smiled for a moment. "What the hell is his problem?"

"You mean besides nearly dying in the stupidest way possible?" Alex was still angry about being scared like that and tended to snarl whenever he was reminded of the day he had spent staring at the emergency room walls.

"Yes. He was fine for a couple of days there. He was tired, he hurt, but he was OK. His mood was good. Then... nothing. He stops talking, stops eating and won't let either of us near him. What happened?"

"He was OK when I took him to the doctor," Alex offered. "I mean, he bitched and moaned for a while about the doctor calling him an 'old man'. She didn't actually, but she reminded him that he wasn't exactly immortal. So did I, for that matter. I told him he wasn't going to see fifty again and he was goddamned lucky he wasn't dead, so he ought to shut up and enjoy the fact that he was still around to be bitching."

There was a silence from the direction of the window seat, the suggestion of a man thinking very hard. Mulder rubbed his hands over his face, then swore.

Alex sat up on his elbow. "What?"

"I'd hate to think it's that simple, but it might just be. That was Tuesday, right? Well, I spent the evening carefully hinting around the idea that he might want to start passing on jobs that required him to climb around other people's roofs."

Alex pursed his lips thoughtfully. "You think...?"

Mulder nodded slowly. "Then I suggested he might want to turn in his stethoscope and jump kit. Stop being an EMT."

"Oh shit. What did he say?"

"He didn't say anything."

Alex groaned and flopped back down on the bed. "So, basically, what you're telling me is that his doctor and both his lovers spent the day telling him he was getting old and fragile and that he ought to just wrap himself up and sit by the fire?"

"Yup," Mulder said quietly. "That's about the long and short of it."

They were silent for a time, then Alex said reflectively, "Actually, I'm sort of surprised that he didn't shoot either one of us."

"What the hell are we going to do about it?"

The two men listened to the wind wailing outside for a while, then Alex said,

"I have an idea."

###

Walter Skinner knew that he was sulking. He was sitting in bed, still wearing shorts and a tee shirt, arms crossed over his chest, watching the moon move across one window and into the next. His knee was still propped up on a pillow, but it gave him barely a twinge when he moved it and was hardly noticeable when he didn't.

He'd spent two days telling himself he was depressed. Then he spent another day or so being positive that it was a delayed midlife crisis. But tonight, when he saw the kicked-puppy look in Mulder's eyes after he'd been asked to sleep in Alex's room, that's when Skinner knew he was simply sulking. Someone had once told him that depression was merely anger without enthusiasm. What he was going through was closer to indignation without zeal.

Face it, Walter. You are over fifty. Most men your age wouldn't bounce back from an injury like this as quickly as you have.

The doctor was right.

Plenty of younger men had fallen half the distance he had and wound up dead. Hell, after half the things he'd done in his life, just to be pushing 55 was a fucking miracle he should be celebrating every day.

Alex was right.

He didn't even like roof work; he'd only gone up to help John out before winter got good and going. He'd be more than happy to never climb a ladder again, in fact.

Mulder was right.

But he'd be damned if he gave up being an EMT.

Sulking, he told himself, is unattractive at any age. Especially in someone your age, he thought and grinned wryly at his empty bedroom. Why Mulder and Alex had put up with it as long as they had, he didn't know. But it was time for it to end. Besides, a few days ago, they had both hinted at a rather unorthodox cure for the blues. He wondered if they might still be willing to demonstrate, if he apologized nicely. He was reaching for the cane he'd graduated to this morning when they both came into the room.

He knew immediately that something was up. He took a deep breath, wondering if he could head off the scolding he knew he deserved. When Alex shook his head warningly, he sighed and knew he was in for it. But they said nothing; just stood together in the middle of the room and looked at him.

Alex put his arm around Mulder's neck and they leaned in toward one another, still gazing at him. Their heads were pressed together and, barefoot, in jeans and flannel shirts, both men ought to have looked wholesome and innocently charming. Instead, there was a sudden deep thrum of sensuality in the room and Walter wondered if it weren't his libido coming out of its sulk just a little behind the rest of him.

"I'm..." he began when Alex cut him off with a sharp motion of his artificial hand.

"Don't say anything, Walter. Not a word. Just watch. Got it?"

Skinner nodded, bemused. At least until Alex used the hand around Mulder's neck to urge his head around. His two lovers stood kissing hungrily, no more than five feet away, at the edge of the pool of light thrown by the one lamp.

Jesus, they were beautiful. Mulder was lean and strong, moving his hands over his partner with a lazy grace. Alex was stockier, more muscular; his one-handed caresses had a fierceness held in careful check. He pulled back for a moment and looked deeply into Mulder's eyes. A question must have been asked, because Mulder smiled and nodded agreement, then nuzzled at Alex's forehead. Skinner caught the edge of one of Alex's demon grins as he took a step behind Mulder, but by the time the younger man looked up again, his expression was blank and he looked intensely focused. Alex's intentions became clear in the next moment. He began nibbling at Mulder's neck as his right hand came up to slowly unbutton Mulder's shirt, one button at a time.

Skinner couldn't look away, which was obviously the point. His punishment was going to be watching Alex seduce Mulder just out of arm's reach. He deserved it, he knew, just as he knew that one of Alex's rules would be that Skinner could not leave, could not move, could not touch himself. Skinner swallowed and settled himself back against the headboard, wordlessly agreeing to everything.

Mulder was arching his neck and breathy little whimpers were audible as Alex ran his teeth lightly across the sweet spot behind Mulder's left ear that Skinner had shown him with such delight over four years ago. It was a constant source of fascination; Mulder could be reduced to incoherency with just a small investment of time and effort in a two inch area of skin. There had been a memorable traffic jam trying to get back onto the Cape on a Friday afternoon last year, during which Alex, who had gotten bored in the back seat, had livened up the entire afternoon by stroking, caressing and otherwise teasing that spot on Mulder's neck. Trapped in the passenger seat, Mulder could do nothing but suffer deliciously. Skinner could still recall the exact timbre of the moan Mulder gave when Alex had wet his fingers in his mouth, then run them in circles just behind Mulder's ear.

It was the same moan he gave now as Alex suckled for a moment, then released him. Mulder's eyes met Skinner's for a moment, glazed and dark, then he closed them again, a slight smile on his lips. Alex slipped the last of Mulder's shirt buttons from its hole, then let his hand drift up Mulder's chest to his shoulder and under the loosened flannel. With a long caress, Alex slid the shirt off, drawing his hand behind Mulder's neck to ease it off the other shoulder and down his arms, where, cuffs still buttoned, it tangled around his wrists. Alex kissed Mulder's temple, whispered something in his ear, then moved away from him. Alex took two steps and stood in front of Skinner, his hand out. Quietly, he said, "Give me some oil."

There was a bottle of massage oil still standing on the bedside table, left over from one of Mulder's numerous recent attempts to cosset him. Skinner poured a small amount into Alex's hand and looked hard at him, trying to gauge his mood. But Alex's face was in shadow and there was nothing to see but the glitter of his eyes, which could have meant anything at all. So Skinner looked beyond him to Mulder and caught his breath at the sight.

Mulder stood just inside the golden circle of light cast by the bedside lamp. His hands were trapped behind him, still cuffed by his shirt. His eyes were closed, he was flushed and breathing fast. There was both pride and submission in his wide-legged stance, as if he were demanding to be ravished and yet knew there was nothing he could do to speed or hinder his tormentor.

"He's beautiful, isn't he?" That same shadowed voice startled Skinner from his reverie. He could only nod, voiceless. Alex smiled a little, almost approvingly at him, then prowled back to where Mulder stood. Moving up behind him, Alex rubbed against him, bringing a gasp from Mulder. Alex soothed him by stroking his oiled hand across Mulder's chest, bracing Mulder's hip with his prosthetic hand. Excess oil trickled down Mulder's abdomen to disappear beneath the waistband of his jeans. Skinner was mesmerized by the slow circling of Alex's strong hand over Mulder's skin, by the flicker of those oiled muscles as Mulder tried to take deeper, slower breaths, by the blown- sand sound of Alex's voice whispering to them both.

"You see him, Skinner? Are you really looking now?" Their eyes met for a moment and Skinner nodded. "This is what you didn't want earlier. Were you wrong?" Skinner nodded again, swallowing heavily. Mulder made a restive movement like a cat demanding a caress, and Alex turned his attention back to the man in his arms. "No one like you, Fox. There's no one in the world like you—I know, I looked." Mulder's lips curled for a moment and he shook his head in amused denial. Alex's hand slid up to Mulder's throat and pulled his head around for a fiercely awkward kiss. "No one," he insisted softly and sealed his argument with a firm caress over the bulge in Mulder's faded jeans and a nip behind his ear. Mulder subsided with a whimper.

Alex's oiled hand had left darkened patches on the crotch of Mulder's jeans. They fascinated Skinner as Mulder squirmed in Alex's arms, almost dancing as he was rubbed and licked, nipped and kissed. He gave a low tremulous moan as Alex's agile fingers slipped the button of his jeans open. Skinner heard himself echoing Mulder's whimper as that clever hand went exploring and returned into the light cradling Mulder's swollen cock and balls, easing them past the open zipper of his jeans. A few caresses with his slick hand and Mulder was a study in erotic abandonment, body arched, gleaming and heated, eyes closed, head thrown back to rest on Alex's shoulder, hands still caught behind his back.

"Skinner?" Alex offered softly.

"Please," he said hoarsely.

Alex looked at him carefully, then smiled in approval at what he saw. It was not a nice smile. Skinner became aware that he was panting and flushed, achingly hard and his fists were twisted in the comforter. "Never again, Skinner, do you understand? You don't do this ever again."

"Promise," Skinner whispered, neither understanding nor caring what he was pledging.

"Good boy," Alex said and gently urged Mulder the last few steps forward. When Skinner's fingers brushed down one thigh, Mulder opened his eyes and smiled. Then he was leaning forward and Skinner was catching his shoulders and rolling him over his own body to land on the bed without straining Skinner's injured knee.

Propped on one elbow, Skinner looked down the long hot length of Mulder's body beside him before growling and rolling on top of him. Mulder's hands were still tangled in his shirt, trapped at his sides, so there was nothing and no one to stop Skinner as he rioted down Mulder's body. He kissed, licked, nipped, scraped, laved and nuzzled him. The faint dusty-sweet taste of the massage oil became a top note to the musky perfume of Mulder's own body as Skinner lapped at the clear drops that slipped from Mulder's cock. Mulder moaned when Skinner began sucking and humming around his flesh and he shouted as he came moments later, twisting and crying out as he poured down Skinner's throat.

Skinner, favoring his injured leg, crawled awkwardly back up to kiss Mulder deeply. Then he leaned back and brushed silvering hair away from Mulder's damp forehead and said, "Sorry I've been such an asshole."

Mulder smiled dreamily and said, "You have been, but you apologize with real style. I'm inclined to forgiveness."

From behind them, Alex growled, "You're too easy on him, Mulder."

"And what do you suggest, Alex?" Mulder asked, grinning.

Skinner barely had time to register Alex kneeling beside them when his shoulder was seized and he was flipped onto his back. Then Alex was looming, hard and hot and dark, over him. Skinner felt a ripple of something that was a distant kin to fear as he looked into Alex's autumn green eyes. Then Alex's mouth had seized his and his lips were being bruised with the fierce caress and he welcomed the pain as simply another part of the wild sweetness of it all.

The younger man was hard and heavy on top of him, rocking his hips across Skinner's groin, matching hardness to hardness. Without thinking, Skinner's arms came up to hold Alex more tightly against him, breath hissing through his teeth when Alex bit at his throat, groaning when he felt the jolt through his cock.

Alex slid down some and kept up that maddening friction against him, never letting up long enough for him to catch his breath or take control. He bit at one of Skinner's nipples through his tee shirt and the wet heat made him cry out and toss his head, writhing with pleasure so sharp-edged it was nearly pain. His head came up against something hard and he was suddenly stilled, caught between Alex's forearm and his prosthetic. Alex's eyes burned above him.

"Let's be very clear here, Skinner. You don't ever do this to us again." Skinner nodded, eyes snared in the deep forest gaze above his, captured in the heat that held him down. "You don't ever lock us out again. You belong to us, do you understand?" Alex emphasized his point by bringing his knee up to rub firmly against Skinner's cock, so hard and so good that he almost came—and then Alex moved it away again. When Skinner sobbed once, hands tightening with bruising force on his hips, Alex was finally satisfied. He leaned down to kiss Skinner very gently this time and brought his knee back up to press firmly against Skinner's cock while rocking against him once, twice, then once more before the older man exploded with a strangled shout, triggering Alex's own wash of pleasure.

After a few minutes, Alex pulled himself away from Skinner with a grimace. He sat up on the edge of the bed and flexed his stiff shoulders then considered his own damp jeans and Skinner's soaked shorts with a complacently curled lip. "Well, that was something else," he said hoarsely. Skinner just shook his head in blind wonder.

"It certainly was," Mulder agreed. "Now, you wanna untie me here?"

It took a few moments to untangle Mulder and strip them all, then a trip to the bathroom for a washcloth to mop up the worst of the stickiness on all three of them. After a moment's careful observation of Skinner's face, Alex went back and got a glass of water and a couple of painkillers. Mulder had curled up on Skinner's shoulder and the two appeared to be dozing. At Alex's nudge, Skinner opened his eyes. He took in Alex's uncompromising expression, saw the water and the pills he held out, then took them with unprecedented meekness.

Alex smiled at him, then turned to take away the glass. Skinner's hand caught his and held him, his expression just as uncompromising as Alex's had been. "You're home now, Alex," he said quietly and tugged on his hand. Knowing he was well and truly caught, Alex put the glass on the bedside table, then slipped into bed next to Skinner. Skinner turned onto his left side to give Alex a little more room. Mulder made a sleepy noise of protest and snuggled back up against him. Alex turned out the light and the room was flooded with moonlight and shadows. Skinner ran a gentle hand over Alex's face, cupping his jaw for a moment in a gesture so tender that Alex's breath caught in his throat. Then all was quiet for a time.

"Still feeling old?" Alex asked drowsily in the dark.

"Unh unh," Skinner mumbled. "Dead," he clarified.

"Good," Alex smiled and fell asleep.

###

JimPage363@aol.com

Note: This is a sequel to the "I Still Have Plans To Go To Mexico" series.
Thanks: Kass, Anne, Leila, Dawn, MJ... and Tucker.
Feedback: JimPage363@aol.com
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Metro/4859/JiM.html (thanks Mona!)

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