From: Brandon Ray <publius@avalon.net>
Date: 30 Jan 1999 00:44:10 -0800
Subject: NEW:  After Tithonus (1/1) by Brandon Ray

---------------------------------------------
TITLE:  After Tithonus (1/1)

AUTHOR:  Brandon D. Ray

EMAIL ADDRESS:  publius@avalon.net

DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT:  Anywhere and everywhere, so long as my name
stays on it and no money changes hands.

FEEDBACK:  Go ahead; knock yourself out.

Ephemeral: *FEEDBACK*publius@avalon.net

SPOILER WARNING:  Tithonus

RATING:  R, for sexual situations

CONTENT WARNING:  MSR.

CLASSIFICATION:  VRA

SUMMARY:  Tithonus post-ep.  Alternate universe, in which Mulder was the
one who worked the Fellig case.  Based on the following quote:  "I think
I'd become a hermit, actually.  That way I'd never have to deal with
losing someone I loved." -- Fox Mulder, "But Ourselves", by Marguerite

Of course, any lameness is my own doing.

DISCLAIMER:  In my dreams...


After Tithonus

by Brandon D. Ray


He liked to go for walks along the river at sunset.  In the summer it
was cool and breezy by the river, allowing him to escape from the heat
of the day, if only briefly.  In the winter it was cold and the wind cut
like a knife, reminding him that he was, after all, still alive.
Whether he wanted to be or not.

He also liked walking by the river because it cut straight through the
heart of the campus, and that meant that most of the people he
encountered were students:  Young, vibrant and full of life and energy.
Only very occasionally did he see one of them grayed out, an indication
of impending tragedy.  And when he did, he looked away.

He had tried living as a hermit, in an old rambling farmhouse far out in
the countryside, but it had not been bearable.  It left him alone with
his own thoughts far too much of the time, and with him that had never
been a good idea.  And so finally he had moved to the small college town
on the banks of the river and constructed a quiet and reclusive
existence, and tried not to think too much.

It was in the third year of his sojourn that she finally found him.  He
had known in the back of his mind that eventually she would return to
his life.  She was smart and tenacious and she had resources, including
her experience in helping him with his own quest all those years ago.
And perhaps, he admitted to himself as he walked up the block towards
the house which his neighbors thought was his home, perhaps deep down
inside he wanted her to find him.

She was sitting in the driver's seat of a late model Ford, parked so
that she was facing away from him.  For a moment it occurred to him that
he could turn and walk away and disappear once again into the wilderness
of civilization, but even as he thought the words his feet were moving
him forward, and in another moment he rapped on the glass of the car
window, and she looked up at him and smiled.

He smiled back.

It was his first smile in nearly three years, and was to be his last for
many hours yet to come.

#          #          #

They walked in silence for awhile, down by the river, easily falling
into step with one another in the old accustomed way.  The tension he
had expected was not present, the mere fact of being together again
after three years of separation apparently being all that was needed for
both of them to understand what was at stake and know how the game would
be played.  It would still be necessary for them to speak the words, and
of course the outcome was very much in doubt, but there was no hurry;
they had time to become reacquainted with each other's presence first.

"I loved you, you know."

It did not surprise him that she spoke first; she had always been the
more forthright of the two of them, while he had constantly
secondguessed and doubted his own thoughts and feelings.  Only on the
rarest of occasions -- usually in moments of great stress and danger --
had his desire for her overcome his fear of intimacy.  But that had been
years ago, and he had changed, and her presence by his side now gave him
strength, rather than weakening him as it so often had in the past.

"I loved you, too," he replied, glancing briefly down at her as they
walked past the theater building.  "That was why I left; I couldn't bear
the thought of...."  He let his voice trail off, trusting her to
complete his sentence for him.  And after a moment, she did.

"You couldn't bear the thought of having me and then losing me."  She
looked up and waited for his nod before continuing.  "But isn't that
just what you've done by running away?  Except that by running you've
denied the good part to both of us, leaving only the heartache and
loneliness."

In another time and place he might have been left breathless by this
stark statement of her feelings, as well as by her shrewd analysis of
his.  Neither of them had ever been very good at expressing their
emotions, choosing to hold on to the friendship they had in a needy,
almost neurotic way, rather than reaching out for the greater closeness
which he had known in his heart they both wanted.  Even then he had
known it; even then.

But that had been years ago, and they both had changed.  And so all he
said now was, "I know."  Calmly accepting responsibility for his
actions, rather than wallowing in self-abnegation as he might have done
in the past.

They walked in silence again for awhile, moving past the art building
and finally turning onto the footbridge that led across the river to the
student union.  It was the dinner hour, and most people were at home or
in the dormitory cafeterias, leaving the riverbanks largely
unpopulated.  And of the few people they did encounter, all were in
color.

"I'm sorry," he said at last.  "I'm truly sorry.  I shouldn't have run,
and having run I should have come back."

"Why didn't you?" she asked.

The answer to that was simple.  "What right had I to come back, after I
abandoned you?"

She stopped walking for a moment, and so did he, and for a pair of
minutes she studied his face.  Finally, she said, "Perhaps no right at
all.  But I would have forgiven you anyway."

He regarded her for another moment or two, and then asked the first and
most important of all his questions.  "Do you forgive me now?"

"I'm here, aren't I?"  And she took his hand and they turned and
continued walking.

#          #          #

Once across the river they turned south once again, and walked on past
the student union and the practice field and the chapel, still holding
hands.  As they approached the railroad underpass which led to the
library he drew her to a halt again, and said, "He told me that 75 years
is the limit."

She looked up at him and nodded slightly, encouraging him to continue.

"Seventy five years," he repeated.  "At the time it seemed very
reasonable, very sensible.  And he told  me that he had to go to the
hall of records just to remember his wife's name."  He looked down at
her sadly.  "I...I couldn't bear the thought of that.  So I decided to
lie to myself instead."

She nodded slowly.  "You decided to try to persuade yourself that you
didn't really care about me."

"That's right.  I thought if I did that I could avoid being hurt after
you were gone."

She shook her head and briefly lowered her eyes, and when she looked
back up again they were shining with unshed tears.  "You're an idiot."

"I know."

"But I love you anyway."

"I know."  And he bent and lightly brushed his lips against hers, and
then he straightened up again and they walked on.

#          #          #

Eventually they reached the water treatment plant, and they turned away
from the river and walked up the hill towards the main campus.  The sun
had set and stars were beginning to appear, and they walked hand-in-hand
in the direction of the rising moon.

The dinner hour was now past, and more people were beginning to appear
on the streets.  And as they stepped off the sidewalk and out onto the
pedestrian mall, a young woman came rushing past them, her arms full of
packages and her face alive with life and energy.  And she was gray.

And he did something he had not done in more than two years:  He turned
and watched her progress across the mall, standing in silence and
holding his friend's hand until the young woman had vanished from his
sight.  And when he turned his gaze downwards again she was looking up
at him, understanding and compassion writ large on her features.

"Her?" she asked.

And he nodded.  "Her."

"How soon?"

"I don't know," he admitted.  "It might be a minute; it might be an
hour.  But soon."

She stared at him steadily for a moment, and then said, "That must be a
terrible gift to have."

"It is."  He hesitated, not sure if he wanted to continue but knowing he
could no longer lie to her, even by omission.  And he added, "And the
worst thing of all, the real reason why I left you, is that I could not
bear the thought that one day you would walk into the room, and it would
be you."

She nodded slowly, and replied, "That would be pretty horrible."  And
she went up on her toes and put her arms around his neck, and this time
the kiss they shared was neither brief nor chaste.  And when they
finally broke for breath, she whispered, "Promise me something."

He nuzzled his cheek against hers, and said, "Anything within my power."

"When the time comes, don't tell me."

"I promise."

#          #          #

Much later they lay in his bed together, resting in each other's arms
and trying to catch their breath.  Moonlight filtered in through the
partially open drapes, and a soft breeze washed over them like a warm,
living blanket.

"He lied to you, you know."  Her voice was soft and dreamy, and still
carried an echo of desire.

"I know," he said, matching her tone precisely.

"He lied to you," she repeated.  "It isn't 75 years -- or 75 minutes, or
75 hours, or even 75 centuries."  She lifted her head from his shoulder
and gave him a long, erotic kiss before continuing.  "It's not any
length of time at all.  The past is past, and the future may never
come.  All any of us really have is now.  And if we don't share now,
we're only cheating ourselves."  And again she kissed him, and her hand
closed around his rapidly hardening penis.

When his mouth was free again, he said, "I know.  I've known that for
over a year.  And I'm sorry I cheated both us out of now for so
long...."  As he had earlier, down by the river, he let his voice trail
off.  And as she had done earlier, down by the river, she completed his
thought.

"But that's in the past.  We still have now."

She rolled onto her back and pulled him down on top of her and he
entered her again with one smooth stroke, causing them both to groan
softly.  Her arms went around his shoulders and her legs went around his
waist, and her hips moved in perfect rhythm with his own.  And she
whispered incoherent phrases of love in his ear, urging him on, until at
last they exploded together, and for a timeless interval there was
nothing in the universe but the two of them.  And finally, slowly,
gently, they settled back down to earth, still wrapped in each other's
arms.

"We still have now," she whispered again, just before they both drifted
off to sleep.  "We still have now.  Till death do us part."



Fini

--
It's not that I'm slipping in my opinion of Fox Mulder.  I've decided
that if my sister is going to work in the FBI, I would rather have him
by her side than about 90 percent of the guys I could name.  He's laid
down his life for her, I appreciate that in a prick.  --Bill Scully,
jr., "By Her Side: That Voice" by Vickie Moseley
================
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