From: Alcott <alcott@chillylegumes.com>
Date: Wed, 03 Nov 1999 10:39:16 -0600
Subject: xfc: REPOST: Bloody Mary (1 of 6)
Source: xfc

From: Alcott <alcott@chillylegumes.com>

(I may have lost all or parts of this story in cyberspace so I'm
reposting. Thanks.)



Title: Bloody Mary
Author: Alcott
Feedback: would be really appreciated, since this is a big departure
from the other stuff I've written. Thanks! alcott@chillylegumes.com
Rating: a strong PG-13
Archiving: I'd be honored, but please let me know first.
Category: The automatic Gossamer classification says it's an  XRA.
Spoilers: a general knowledge of the show will clue you in.
Summary: "You've always thought I didn't believe in the supernatural,
Mulder," she said. "The truth is, I just. . . deny it."
Disclaimer: The characters belong to Gillian and David and the writers
who created them, and Chris Carter holds the keys to the kingdom. No
disrespect is intended to the residents of Plum City or to the
descendants of the family who died there so many years ago.

* * * * *

The Archer Residence
Plum City, Wisconsin

Halloween 1978

The door opened, ripping away cobwebs and causing the inhabitants of the

house to scurry away.

The three girls were standing then in the doorway of Hell House, daring
to go further than any other child had ever gone.

Melissa Scully coughed on the dust that rose and motioned for her sister

to follow her.

Dana Scully, younger and more timid than Melissa, held her windbreaker
close to her body and stuck close to her sister. "Missy, I want to go
home," she squeaked.

Audrah Martin, a blonde, fearless girl the same age as Melissa, pushed
past them, her newly purchased Ouija board under her arm. "We should
have left your sister at home," she accused.

Melissa lifted her head, standing a few inches taller than Audrah.
"Leave her alone or I'll deck you."

"Missy," Dana reached to take her sister's hand. Melissa squeezed her
fingers and whispered, "Don't worry, we'll be fine."

Audrah had dared her cousins to play the Ouija board inside the Hell
House, which had been abandoned years ago but was always the subject of
whispered ghost stories. In the 1920's, Daniel Archer, a farmer who
owned the house and the land surrounding it, had slaughtered his wife
and five children while they were sitting at the dinner table. A
neighbor, dropping by with a fresh apple pie, had found him in the
middle of the parlor, screaming, "Are you happy now?" into the mirror.
Then, he raised his bloody hunting knife and cut his own throat.

Everyone knew the stories around Hell House. Dana hadn't given it much
thought until her sister, who couldn't bear to be one-upped, agreed to
their cousin's dare. Dana had insisted she go along, to keep an eye on
her sister. But now she was trembling in terror, while Melissa lit the
emergency candles she'd snitched from the kitchen cupboard and Audrah
stepped into the gaping, black hole of the parlor entrance.
The cobwebs were so thick that it was nearly impossible to breathe
without inhaling them. In the middle of a faded, dirty rug, Audrah sank
to her knees, setting up her game.

Dana sat down, too, glancing nervously at the dark shadows around them.
What was probably a couch behind her looked more like something
crouching, waiting for them.

There was a small amount of comfort in the fact that they hadn't closed
the front door behind them. Still, there were no streetlights to offer
illumination this far away from town.

Dana chanced a glance around her and saw the dark chandelier over her
head and the way the candles flickered, giving the illusion that the
furniture around them was breathing. She shivered and moved closer to
her sister, her hands jammed into the pockets of her jacket. After a
moment, she lifted the hood over her auburn hair, just in case something

wanted to crawl up her back and get beneath her jacket.

The Ouija board was before them, its number and letters antiquated to
give the impression the board was ancient, when in fact Audrah had
bought it that afternoon with her allowance.

Audrah sat across from them and instructed them to place their
fingertips on the planchette. Melissa did so without hesitation, but
Dana's fingers trembled as she placed them against the little wooden
triangle.

Audrah closed her eyes and asked in a melodramatic voice, "Is there a
spirit here?"

The planchette jerked, and Dana almost lost contact with it as it raced
toward the Y, then to the E, then down to the S.

<"Missy," Dana whimpered.>

"Hush!" Audrah commanded. Then in her spirit-summoning voice, she asked,

"What is your name?"

....M....A....

<"Missy, Mom's going to kill us...">

...R...Y...

"What do you look like?" Audrah asked.

<"Missy, I want to go home.">

<Shhh, Dana, it's okay. Just humor her and then we'll get the hell out
of here.">

...G....O...

Dana cried out and pulled her fingers away. Audrah reached and grabbed
her hand. "Dammit, you big baby! You keep your hand on the planchette or

I'm going to tell everyone that you kissed another girl in the broom
closet!"

Melissa widened her eyes. "You kissed another girl?"

"I did not!" Dana cried. "You're lying!"

Audrah smiled maliciously, and Dana had no doubt that her high school
life could be ruined by one rumor uttered from this older girl. Tears
began to stream down her cheeks as she pressed her fingers against the
planchette.

Audrah glared at her younger cousin. "I'm not a chicken shit like you
are," she said. In a louder voice, she said, "I am here, spirit. Where
do you want me to go?"

The planchette began to move.

...M...I...R...R...O....R...

"She wants us to look in the mirror," Melissa breathed. When her cousin
didn't move, Melissa elbowed her. "You do it."

As if in a trance, Audrah rose slowly to her feet. Pulled by an unseen
force, she took a step toward the cracked mirror hanging above the cold,

dusty fireplace.

Melissa grabbed the candles and scrambled to her feet, her sister right
on her heels.

"She wants me to say her name." Audrah's voice had fallen into a
monotone. Melissa raised the candles over her head, casting the entire
room in dim, dancing light. Shadows seemed to drip down the ancient
walls.

"Bloody Mary. . ." the girl intoned.

"All right, you're freaking me out," Melissa said. "Let's go home."

The darkness of the mirror began to swirl with light.

"Audrah, did you hear me? I said, no more!" Melissa stalked to the game
board and snatched up the planchette. "We're not playing anymore."

"Bloody Mary. . ." Audrah whispered.

Melissa stalked forward, her arm outstretched to protect her little
sister. "Dana, don't look."

Dana clutched her sister's arm and whimpered.

Triumphantly, Audrah shouted, "Bloody Mary!"

The only thing that appeared was a mouse, which ran helter-skelter
across the floor. Still, his appearance was enough to make the
frightened girls screech and the sisters to clutch each other.

The spell broken, Audrah turned to them and sniffed, "What a couple of
cowards you are."

"Well, these cowards are going home," huffed Melissa. "And since this
coward drove, I suggest you come with us."

Dana breathed a sigh of relief and headed straight for the front door.

As soon as her fingers touched the doorknob, the heavy oak door slammed,

nearly dragging Dana with it.

Dana screamed and jumped backward. Melissa, behind her, took a step back

and screamed to Audrah, "Come ON."

But Audrah was transfixed on the mirror. Or rather, of the watery image
appearing inside the mirror.

It was a woman, dressed in black, her black hair floating around her
head as if she were under water. Her face was so pale it hurt the eyes
to look at her; her skin was bloated and decayed. Her throat was slit
from ear to ear and her eyes glowed the same color as the ancient blood
that dripped from her wound.

The woman's bony fingers clawed for Audrah.

Melissa dove for the doorknob and the door opened easily. The sisters
dropped their candles and burst into the chilly Halloween air,
stumbling, screaming.

They flew to their mother's car and hopped inside. Waiting for something

to reach into the car, Dana rolled up her window as her sister jammed
the car into reverse and floored the gas pedal. The car bolted forward,
fishtailing and sending up a cloud of dirt in their wake.

"Where's Audrah, where is she?" Melissa gasped.

"She's not behind us," Dana sobbed, craning her neck to look out the
rear window. "I don't know where she went!"

"We have to go back," Melissa began, but her words were cut off by her
sister's scream.

Reflected in the passenger-side window was the image of the gruesome
spirit. Her hair whipped in the air, her eyes burned in flames, and she
was reaching, this time for Dana.

Dana scrambled across the seat, getting as close to her sister as she
could. The thought of going back abandoned Melissa's brain, and the girl

drove like the Devil itself was chasing them.

END (1/6)

From: Alcott <alcott@chillylegumes.com>
Date: Wed, 03 Nov 1999 10:39:46 -0600
Subject: xfc: REPOST: Bloody Mary (2 of 6)
Source: xfc

From: Alcott <alcott@chillylegumes.com>

FBI Headquarters
Washington, DC

Late October, 1999

"Want to hear something spooky?"

It wasn't the question Dana Scully wanted to hear at 8 a.m. She glanced
at her partner and headed for the coffee pot. "No, Mulder, not
especially."

He was undaunted, as usual. "You remember that Bloody Mary legend,
right?"

Scully froze, a packet of cream suspended over her cup. "The one where
you say her name three times and she's supposed to appear in a mirror,
right?"

"That's one version," Mulder agreed. "Sometimes it's seven times,
sometimes thirteen, but it's always in front of a mirror. Then Mary is
supposed to appear, and either kill you, scratch your eyes out, or drag
you into the mirror with her."

"Sounds lovely." Scully stirred her coffee and forced herself to take
deep, slow breaths. "And why are you telling me this?"

"Because Mary is being blamed for the deaths of three teenagers in
Wisconsin." Mulder tossed her a manila envelope and sat back in his
chair.

Scully sat down at her desk and slid her finger under the adhesive
mouth of the envelope. Inside were a handful of black and white crime
photos, each displaying a young girl, her body twisted, her face masked
forever in horror.

The first girl's head smashed into the windshield of her car moments
after the vehicle had hit a tree straight on. "Jody Martenson," Mulder
explained. "Age 15. Cause of death: blunt trauma to the brain."

The second photo showed an equally young and pretty girl. At least she
had been pretty, before she had smashed her head through her bedroom
window, cutting her jugular like a knife slicing through butter on a
summer afternoon. "Her name was Amy Ewing," Mulder said. "She was 14.
She was late making curfew and her mother was waiting up for her. Amy
told her mother that she and her three friends had been playing Bloody
Mary in this old abandoned farmhouse on the edge of town. Her mother
grounded her and the girl went upstairs to her bedroom. Estimated time
of death: 12:15 a.m., October 26th."

The third girl could not be identified by her face, since her entire
head had been shoved right through the bathroom mirror. There was
nothing left except masses of brain tissue and other gore so mangled
even Scully couldn't identify it. "Lara Atkins," said Mulder. "Age
15. . ."

"And the spirit of a queen who died hundreds of years ago is causing
all this?" Scully replaced the photos into the envelope with fingers
that trembled slightly. "What happened to the fourth girl?"

"Her name is Carrie Spencer. She was visiting from England; she was pen
pals with Jody."

"Where is she now?"

"A hospital. She's catatonic. Hasn't spoken a word since that night."




Plum City Community Hospital
Psychiatric unit
Plum City, Wisconsin

"Carrie?"

If the girl had heard Scully's words, she didn't react. Instead, too
thin and clad only in a hospital gown, she sat in the middle of her
bed, rocking back and forth. Her hands, balled into fists, were tight
against her eye sockets.

Mulder hung back, uncomfortable with the way the child was rocking.

Scully took a step closer, not bothering to show a badge to a girl who
would refuse to look. "Carrie? My name is Dana. I'm with the FBI."

The child whimpered and rocked.

Scully sat gingerly on the edge of the bed. "Can you tell me what it is
you're afraid of, Carrie?"

The nurse who had allowed them admittance into the psych ward shook her
head and sighed. "You're not going to get her to speak, you know. She
hasn't spoken, hasn't done anything. We're going to have to feed her by
tube pretty soon if she doesn't pull out of it."

Scully reached up, tentatively, and lay her hand against the girl's
long, golden hair.

At the soothing touch, the girl slowed her movements, and Scully
instinctively smoothed her hand over Carrie's stringy hair. Once,
twice, three times, and the girl had stopped her jerky movements.
Still, she kept her fists jammed into her eye sockets.

"Could we be alone?" Scully asked, her voice intentionally monotone and
unthreatening.

The nurse turned to leave, but Mulder paused. "What's going on?"

"You, too," she said in the same quiet tone. "Trust me."

Mulder knitted his brows, but turned on the heel of his shoe and walked
out of the room.

Scully tugged on the girl's hands. "It's okay, she's not here, Carrie."

Scully leaned closer to Carrie and whispered, "What did you see,
Carrie?"

The girl whimpered.

"Was she in the mirror?"

The girl lowered her fists, ever so slightly, so she could peer through
bloodshot green eyes and whisper, "I saw her."

Scully nodded. "I know you did." She rubbed her palm over the girl's
shoulder. "It's going to be all right, Carrie. I promise."


The Archer residence
Plum City

Mulder drew his gun and toed the front door open. Inside, he glanced
around the dusty surroundings.

"So this is Hell House," he said, unimpressed. "Yeah. It's terrifying."

It wasn't terrifying; in the afternoon sun, it just looked old and
decrepit. The curtains hung in tatters; and all the crumbling fixtures
were coated in decades of dust.

"Why the hell is this place still standing?" Mulder muttered. He
glanced up the staircase, brushing cobwebs away from his line of sight
as he stepped into the shadowy parlor.

His eyes dropped when he felt a different texture fall under his shoe.
A piece of cardboard, void of the grime that covered everything else,
caught his eye and he kneeled down to touch its place on the floor.
"What have we here?" He flipped it over.

It was a Ouija board.

He picked it up, turned it over a few times. "What do you think,
Scully?"

When there was no reply, he turned back. "Scully?"

Scully was rooted in the doorway of the house. In the light streaming
through broken windows, he could see her face drain of color.

"What's the matter?" he asked.

She parted her lips, but didn't speak.

He stepped closer. "Scully, what's going on?"

"I've been here before," she blurted. "Here, in Hell House. I've been
here."

"What? When?"

"I was a teenager. My sister and I came up here with our cousin one
night."

"Why didn't you tell me this sooner?"

She turned on her heel. "I have to get some air."

Before he could speak, she was out the door.

As she descended the driveway to their car, she tried to keep her spine
straight, fully aware he was right behind her. Her knees were trembling
as if they were about to fail her. She opened the passenger door and
sat down, fighting to not collapse. A memory from the past flashed
before her eyes, and she hurriedly rolled down the window.

Mulder dropped to his knees in front of her open door. "Are you sick?"

She nodded. He stood, closed her door and slid behind the steering
wheel. "I'm taking you to the hospital, Scully."

"No!" She closed her eyes and forced herself to take deep breaths. "I
just need to calm down a little. I'll be fine." A tiny sob welled in
her throat, but she tamped it down. "Please, Mulder. I'm a medical
doctor, I know what's best. I just. . . I need to lie down."

He didn't want to chance upsetting her further.  He put the car in gear
and headed down the dirt driveway.

By the time they had reached their motel, Scully's cheeks had regained
a little of their color, but her face was still tight and. . . it
seemed like a long shot to him, but. . . she looked frightened. She
didn't speak when he held open the door and helped her to stand, or
when he unlocked her door and ushered her inside.

She didn't speak, in fact, until he had propped her up in bed, a
blanket thrown over her legs, and was perched on the edge of the
dressing table.

Looking at her.

"I'm fine," she said in response to his unspoken question. "Really."

He looked at her wordlessly.

"I'm tired," she explained. "And I can't sleep if you're sitting
there."

He didn't seem convinced.

"Mulder, please go to your room. I'll just catch a nap before dinner,
all right?"

He didn't want to; she could see that. But he didn't want to upset her
while she was in what seemed like a delicate state of mind. So he stood
up, nodded and left her in peace.

But peace didn't come. She turned off the lamp and stared out the
windows at the shadows of early evening.

She closed her eyes and willed her body to relax. Finally, she began to
drift as the room eased into total darkness. It seemed like she had
only slept a moment, when she felt the presence in the room.

It whispered her name.

"What do you want for dinner?" she mumbled, rubbing her eyes.

There was no response. Again, she heard the whisper.

She yawned and sat up, still rubbing. "I'm up for pizza."

She raised her head.

Peering out of the vanity mirror was Audrah.

Except this Audrah had flaming red eyes and when she parted her cracked
lips, her teeth were blackened. Blood spilled from the corner of her
mouth and ran down her chin, and she smiled and whispered, "You'll help
me, won't you, Dana."

Scully scrambled out of bed, knocking over the lamp in her haste to
illuminate the room and frighten away the demon.

By the time the room was lit, Mulder was standing in the doorway, his
revolver drawn. "Scully! What is it?"

They were alone in the room.

He dropped the gun onto the bed and clasped her shoulders. "What the
hell happened?"

"Nothing," she breathed. "A bad dream."

He looked around the room, expecting to see a third person. "Are you
sure that's all it was?"

For a split second, he thought she was going to cry. But then the mask
dropped over her and she was back in control. "Yes."

"All right, well. . ." He rubbed her arms a little, and then dropped
his hands. "I ordered a pizza with everything on it, and those
breadsticks you like so much. Sound good?"

"Yes," she said quickly. Avoiding the mirror, she grabbed her room key
and followed him into the night.

END (2/6)

From: Alcott <alcott@chillylegumes.com>
Date: Wed, 03 Nov 1999 10:40:39 -0600
Subject: xfc: Bloody Mary (3 of 6)
Source: xfc

From: Alcott <alcott@chillylegumes.com>


Title: Bloody Mary
Author: Alcott
(See part one for further info.)


Several slices later, they sat on his rumpled bed, watching old reruns
on Nick at Night. Mulder chewed thoughtfully on his fourth or fifth
piece of pizza, his eyes growing sleepy.

Scully, however, felt that she'd never sleep again as long as she
lived.  And she was nervous enough to contemplate camping out in
Mulder's room for the rest of the night. But how would she explain her
actions? Could she just casually mention, "Oh, by the way, Mulder, the
scientist in me has taken a leave of absence and I'm afraid of a demon
who looks like the cousin we all gave up for dead twenty one years ago"?

He'd have her committed. She and Carrie could share a room.

"What's wrong tonight?"

His inquiry brought her out of her reverie. "I want to come up with a
rational explanation for what's happened, and I can't."

He wiped his mouth with a napkin and took a sip of Coke. "Really. Even I

can figure this one out, Scully."

She turned blue eyes to stare at him, and he continued. "They're farm
girls bored with their lives. They make a suicide pact and kill
themselves. The fourth one chickens out of the pact, fakes a breakdown
to save her ass. End of story."

"What about the Bloody Mary part?"

He snorted. "Oh, come on, Scully. Everyone plays that stupid game.
Didn't you?"

"Yes," she whispered.

"And what happened? Nothing, right?"

She nodded and untangled herself from his bed.

He watched her, still munching on his pizza. He and his sister had
played that Bloody Mary game; they'd looked in the bathroom mirror and
called the spirit a couple of times and Samantha had gotten scared and
screamed and flung open the door. When Sam had told her mom about the
game they'd been playing, Fox had been grounded for an entire month.

Inside the bathroom, Scully was leaning over the sink, splashing water
on her cheeks in an attempt to calm the jitters inside her. Outside the
door, Mulder was calling her name and asking if she had seen anything
when she'd played Bloody Mary.

It was then that she first heard the soft murmur. Not wanting to, but
feeling compelled to, she lifted her eyes and saw the reflection in the
mirror was not her own.

Audrah was weeping now, with bloody tears streaking down her cheeks.
"Dana," she keened, "Set me free. . ."

She reached out and Scully backed against the door with a thunk. Mulder
asked if she was all right in there, but she couldn't hear him over the
rushing in her ears.

Audrah nodded knowingly. "You can see me. You can <help> me."

Scully jerkily shook her head.

"Yes," Audrah encouraged, beckoning. "Come closer."

The humming heightened and Scully clapped her hands over her ears.

Mulder was reaching for the last piece of pizza when he heard the
strangled sob coming from the bathroom. He muted the television and
cocked his head.

There it was again.

He got up and walked to the bathroom. "Scully? Are you sick?"

He turned the knob and peeked his head around the door.

Fiery light filled the bathroom, pouring from the mirror. Flames licked
at Scully, almost caressing her skin.

Instinctively, Mulder ducked, expecting a back draft of fire. "Scully!
Get out of here!"

She was standing close to the mirror, leaning against the sink. A
bloody, cut face appeared where Scully's reflection should have been.

She was staring at the face, as if it were an eclipse she couldn't tear
her eyes away from.

Dragging herself from the spell, she picked up Mulder's can of shaving
cream from the edge of the sink and slammed it into the mirror. A sharp
crackling of glass, and the mirror splintered into a cobweb of cracks,
unwilling to break completely.

The light vanished, the face vanished. The only thing that remained was
the light from the bathroom fixture above the sink and the faint, acrid
scent of smoke.

She was not burned, except for an angry redness on each cheek, but her
right hand was crimson with her own blood. Paying no heed to it, she
turned away and walked purposefully out the door.

Mulder stepped closer to the mirror, looking for trickery: lights,
pyrotechnics, anything that would give him an explanation for what had
just happened.

He found nothing but a broken mirror.

He grabbed a clean white towel from the rack and closed the bathroom
door behind him as he stepped out. Scully had taken the bedspread from
his bed and was tucking it around the edges of the mirror that hung
above the television, making sure that whatever had appeared in the
bathroom mirror wouldn't be able to make a second appearance. Blood ran
down her arm in streaks.

Her eyes wide and staring, she backed away and sank into the edge of the

tousled bed.

His hands shook as he sat beside her and took her arm. He inspected her
hand and forearm to make sure there was no embedded glass and that the
cuts were not near any major veins, and then wrapped the towel around
her. "Are you okay?"

Her face was deathly pale and void of expression. Her chest heaved, and
then heaved again, and within a second she was hyperventilating.

He dumped the breadsticks from their paper bag and pressed it against
her mouth and nose. He held it tightly. "Breathe, Scully. Deep breaths."

She pressed her own freezing hands against his and closed her eyes,
breathing with her shoulders.

"Breathe from your diaphragm," he reminded gently.

She mumbled something. He lowered the bag. "What did you say?"

"Garlic," she breathed.

He smiled and set the bag on the floor. The color was returning to her
face.

"She's gone now," she whispered.

She sat upright, facing him.

"I have an explanation," she said. "But it's not a scientific one."

The look of tender concern on his face was almost her undoing, and she
stood quickly and turned her back on him.

"I was fourteen," she said quietly. "My father was on a six-month tour
and my mother was lonely. So we were staying with my mother's sister and

her daughter. My cousin, Audrah, was a hellion. We all went to the same
school that semester, and she tormented us. It was hard enough being the

new kids, and knowing we wouldn't be there very long, and she knew it."

She rubbed her hands over her eyes. "She brought Melissa and I up to
Hell House on Halloween night to play with her new Ouija board. Said she

would stop teasing if we went with her."

She faced him, her jaw set in a tight line. "You've always thought I
didn't believe in the supernatural, Mulder," she said. "The truth is, I
just. . . deny it."

"What did you see?" he asked quietly. There was no trace of the teasing
she'd half-expected. Encouraged, she told the story she had never
discussed with anyone, not even Melissa. She told him everything; about
the nightmares that plagued her still; how Audrah's mother had searched
for her until her dying day; and how the event had changed the sisters
forever, transforming Melissa into a new-age hippie, intent on
protecting herself from the evil she'd witnessed that night. Dana had
turned to science, using scientific answers as her backbone against the
unknown.

When it was over, it was Mulder who had tears in his eyes, his mind
washed in the vision of Scully as a child, keeping the darkest of
secrets locked inside her.

He wanted to draw her into his arms and squeeze her body near, but
instead, he picked up their car keys and told her to sit at the small
round table in the corner of the room.

When he returned, she was sitting at the table, her eyes overflowing
with a mixture of sorrow and fear. Carrying her extensive,
everything-but-the-kitchen-sink first aid kit, he knelt beside her and
carefully unwrapped her hand and arm.

The cuts were not severe. He cleaned them with peroxide, then bandaged
the small ones with Band-aids and covered a deeper cut with a butterfly
bandage; and then applied a long gauze bandage to her palm, which had
taken the brunt of the blow.

"There," he murmured. "All fixed. Is there something I can do for your
face?"

She lifted her uninjured hand to touch her face, and she grimaced
slightly. "No, that's all right. They're only first-degree burns."

He held her wounded hand in his own for a moment, contemplating. Then he

suggested, "I think we should talk to a priest tomorrow."

"A priest?" She managed the tiniest of smiles. "Mulder, you?"

"We need someone who has an inside track with God," he grinned. He
scrounged up an old Oxford sweatshirt from his suitcase, and tossed it
to her. "Why don't you get ready for bed?"

"I'll be all right in my room."

"Yeah, well, I want you to stay here," he admitted.

She knew he didn't need her to be there. He was used to weird things,
believed in them wholeheartedly. After all these years, they didn't seem

to faze him too much.

She didn't care. Truthfully, she had no desire to be alone tonight.

She headed for the bathroom to change, then hesitated. She felt that
Audrah was gone, but she didn't want to press her luck. Sensing this,
Mulder lay down on his bed and pressed a pillow against his face. "I
won't look," he said in a muffled voice.

She smiled, and reached for the top button of her blouse. "No peeking,"
she said sternly.

He held up his hand in a Vulcan salute. "Scout's honor."

She rolled her eyes, shed her blouse and bra and pulled the big, long
sweatshirt over her head. It nearly covered to her knees.

"All right, you can stop smothering yourself now."

He lifted the pillow and was awarded with the sight of her lifting the
immense sweatshirt to unbutton her slacks, and then shimmy them off her
hips. Unfortunately, gravity pulled the sweatshirt down over her
sensible cotton underwear, never affording him a peek of anything.

"What about you?" she asked. "Don't tell me you sleep in a tie."

He dove under the blankets, did some strange maneuvering that made him
look like he was being devoured by a blanket monster, and then tossed
his tie, dress shirt and slacks to the floor. "Ta da," he grinned.

"Are you wearing underwear?" she asked.

"Yes. Are you?" he deadpanned.

Again, she rolled her eyes and climbed into bed beside him. She had
slept beside him during many bizarre circumstances, but never before in
just her underpants and a sweatshirt. She stayed on her side of the bed,

her arms and legs straight.

Mulder grinned at her. "Scully, you need to relax."

"I'm relaxed," she said. "Goodnight."

She closed her eyes, and he pretended to watch television, even though
he was watching her from the corner of his eye. During the credits for
"The Dick Van Dyke Show", her body visibly sagged into the mattress.
Halfway through "I Love Lucy", she fell asleep.

Halfway through "The Mary Tyler Moore Show", she whimpered and moaned.

Mulder had been nearly asleep himself when he heard her. It brought him
to full consciousness in a millisecond, and he propped himself up on his

elbow. "Hey," he called softly. He reached to touch her.

She flailed her arms for a moment, then threw a punch that landed
squarely on his jaw.

"Oww, shit!" he yelped, clapping his hand over his jawline.

She opened her blurry eyes. "Mulder?" she whispered.

"You slugged me!"

"What?" She was fully awake now, sitting up with the blanket clutched to

her chest.

He lowered his hand and worked his jaw from side to side. "You were
having a nightmare," he explained sourly. "I hope you got the bad guy."

She looked suddenly small and frightened. "I don't remember. I'm sorry,
Mulder."

He nodded, feeling guilty for snapping at her after all she'd been
through that evening. And really, his jaw was already calming; the fact
Scully had struck him, even in sleep, was his real injury, however
irrational that injury was.

He softened his voice. "Are you going to be able to sleep?"

She smiled crookedly. "Are you sure you want me to sleep with you? I'm
probably a health hazard."

"I like to live dangerously." He slipped his arm under her shoulders and

pulled her beside him.

She nodded sleepily, and her eyes closed. He closed his as well, and
within a moment, sleep had enveloped them.

END (3/6)

From: Alcott <alcott@chillylegumes.com>
Date: Wed, 03 Nov 1999 10:41:55 -0600
Subject: xfc: REPOST: Bloody Mary (4 of 6)
Source: xfc

From: Alcott <alcott@chillylegumes.com>

Title: Bloody Mary
Author: Alcott
(See part one for further info.)


The Rectory of St. John's Catholic Church

10:05 a.m.

Father Christopher Tobey set a plate of shortbread cookies in the
middle of the table, and then pulled two cans of Pepsi from the
refrigerator.

"My kitchen is rarely well-stocked, and I'm a terrible cook," he said
with a smile. "Mostly I rely on the kindness of my congregation to feed
me something beyond saltines." He offered the sodas, and then sat down.
"Amy Ewing's funeral was yesterday, which accounts for the leftover
cookies. There's a ladies aid meeting this afternoon, so I suspect I'll
have a casserole for supper."

The priest was young and handsome, probably a favorite with the women
in his congregation. Mulder estimated his age to fall somewhere between
his own and Scully's; in fact, he was considering asking for an older,
preferably decrepit priest, when Scully said, "We're here to talk to
you about Bloody Mary."

"The sixteenth century queen who slaughtered thousands of Protestants
in the name of Catholicism, or the spirit who supposedly appeared up at
Hell House?"

"The latter," Mulder replied.

Scully fiddled nervously with her soda can. "Father, I lived in Plum
City briefly as a teenager."

"Really?" he said pleasantly. "When?"

"During the fall of 1978." Her voice faltered, and Mulder reached to
squeeze her hand. She lifted her chin. "My sister, cousin and I went up
to Hell House to play with my cousin's Ouija board on Halloween night."

"Dangerous," the priest commented.

"The game spelled out the name Mary, and then. . . it was as if
something was pulling my cousin to the mirror. And then. . ."

"She said the name Bloody Mary three times, correct?"

Scully nodded.

"And then what happened, Agent Scully?"

"A face appeared," Scully whispered. "My sister and I ran away, but no
one ever saw my cousin again."

"Your cousin's a legend, if memory serves me correctly," he said
solemnly. "Around Halloween, a woman supposedly appears up at Hell
House. We have kids going up there every year, looking for her."

Scully's face grew anguished. "How long has this been going on?"

"Since your cousin disappeared, I'm afraid."

The priest reached to touch her hand. Before he could, however, she
rose to her feet. "Excuse me, I need to get some fresh air."

Father Tobey rose to follow, but Mulder touched his arm. "She just
needs a minute alone. I know her. She'll be all right."

"Should she be alone?" the priest worried.

"Scully is very into guilt," Mulder sighed. "If you'll forgive me,
Father, I think it's a side effect to being Catholic."

The priest nodded and sat back down, picking up a cookie and nibbling
it absently.

"Father, last night, the spirit appeared in my bathroom mirror," Mulder
said. "There was fire. Agent Scully sustained minor burns to her face.
She broke the mirror and the fire evaporated. But whatever this thing
is, it's coming after her."

The priest paled slightly. "Why did you come here, Agent?"

"We need your help."

Father Tobey nodded. "Can I assume you're not Catholic yourself?"

Mulder smiled wryly. "Yes, Father, you can assume that."

Father Tobey chuckled nervously. "Exorcisms are rather detailed things.
I would have to receive permission from many superiors above me before
I'd be able to help."

"Does that mean you won't help us at all?"

The priest sighed. "I shall pray about it, Agent Mulder. It's all I can
do right now." He stood and offered a wavering smile. "Would you two
like to join me for casserole this evening?"

"Six o'clock?"

"Yes, that will give me time to come up with a plan."

Mulder gathered his coat. "Do you believe that Ouija boards have power,
Father?"

He muddled the question for a moment. "You're not the first person to
ask," he said slowly. "The church believes that evil spirits are near
us, just as good spirits are. There is a constant struggle between good
and evil."

"What does that mean?" Mulder asked.

"It means, Agent Mulder, that if you invite a demon, it will come."

A chill ran down Mulder's spine, and he nodded. "Thank you for your
time, Father. We'll see you this evening?"

The young priest nodded, and rose, but Mulder waved for him to sit.
"Thank you, Father, I can see myself out."

Outside, he found her sitting on the cold cement stairs of the church,
shivering inside her trench coat. He walked toward her, but she did not
raise her chin.

"I'm going to go and talk to Amy's mother. Do you want to come?" he
asked.

She raised her eyes. "If you don't mind, Mulder, I think I'll just go
back to our rooms."

He nodded, but she didn't wait for approval; she was already on her
feet and heading for the motel.

"Let me give you a ride," he began.

She didn't bother to turn her head. "No thanks, I'd rather walk."




The Newberry Motel
4:30 p.m.

"I have news," he said, dropping the car keys atop the television set.

Instinctively, she braced herself. "Did Mrs. Ewing tell you something?"

"Actually, it was something she gave me. Scully, she had Audrah's
diary."

Immediately, an image of a small book covered in hearts and locked with
a tiny gold lock flashed past her eyes even before Mulder produced it
from his overcoat pocket.

The book, shiny and barely used when Scully saw it last, was dirty and
tattered now. Scully wiped gingerly at the cover. "How did she find
it?"

"Her daughter bought it at a flea market last week. They went up to
Hell House with it, and they found the old Ouija board on the floor.
They couldn't find the thingy you use with it-"

"The planchette."

"-So they just used the bottom of an old wine glass they found in the
house. But that's all Amy told her mom before her mom sent her to her
room." Mulder rubbed his eyes wearily. "And believe me, she's feeling a
world of guilt right now."

The book opened easily to the last entry, and Mulder watched her
expression as she read the passage. He'd read it already, cursing the
nasty girl's memory as she wrote about the "stupid Scully girls" and
how she would scare them so badly by contacting a spirit at Hell House.

He remembered the girl's words vividly.

"Hopefully they will be so frightened that they will run all the way
home to the Navy base.

"Because they aren't wanted here."

She read in silence for long moments. She wasn't in tears, but when she
spoke, her nose was congested. "My cousin didn't think much of me or
Melissa, did she?"

He gnawed on his lip for a second. "It wasn't your fault, Scully. What
happened last week, it wasn't your fault."

"I can't help but feel somewhat responsible, Mulder." She kneaded the
back of her neck with a grimace.

"Here, let me." He knelt behind her and grasped the muscles in her
shoulders. With his very first squeeze, she emitted a low moan. He let
go as if her skin had burned his fingers.

"Did I hurt you?"

"Oh, yes," she moaned. "More."

He smiled to himself and stroked her shoulders, then began to knead the
muscles again.

"It's been a long damn day," she sighed.

He mumbled something affirmative, but truthfully he was more concerned
at his body's rising reaction to Scully's little moan. He glanced down
between their bodies; sure enough, he was. . . protruding.

For God's sake, he reprimanded himself. You're not a schoolboy anymore.

A series of contented little sounds came from deep inside Scully's
throat. When the muscles finally gave way between his fingers, she
sighed in relief and bowed her head.

But with the relaxation, came a release of emotion, and suddenly, her
shoulders shook. His hands froze as his blood ran cold. "Scully?" he
whispered.

She raised her head. "No, I'm fine," she whispered impatiently. "I'm
fine, really."

He scooted from her, and for a second, she thought he was leaving. Then
he was in front of her, kneeling, his eyes crinkling with the gentlest
of smiles.

"No," he shook his head sadly. "Not fine."

He pressed her to his chest. She buried her face against his shirt,
comforted by the faint scent of his day-old cologne.

Mulder fought back the own emotions that he had been tamping down since
stepping into the bathroom and finding it in flames. He squeezed her
tightly.

Still, his grip couldn't keep the guilt at bay, and she whispered, "She
couldn't have done the ritual by herself, Mulder. If Melissa and I
hadn't gone up there with her. . ."

"Shhhh, shhhh. . ."

"If we had just had some guts, if we had just told her no. . . it
wouldn't have ha-happened." And then the dam burst, and she began to
weep.

He held her tighter as wave after wave of sobs washed over her, peaked,
and then died away. Finally, her crying diminished to hiccupy gasps,
and she pulled back, her hand over her dripping nose. He understood
immediately and brought her a box of tissues from the bed stand.

He rubbed her knees as she blew her nose and weakly wiped her eyes. She
sucked at her trembling lip, gaining composure. . . a composure that
collapsed as soon as she met his gaze again.

"It's not your fault," he said. "It was never your fault. You were just
a kid."

A small whimper, and then the tears flowed again, despite her powerful
efforts to make them stop.

He was a trained psychologist. He knew that weeping was a healthy
reaction to pain. It was normal. It was nothing to be alarmed about. It
should be encouraged as a means for the person to purge the pain within.

Yet he found himself whispering, "Don't cry. . .please don't cry,
Scully."

"I'm not, I'm. . . not. . ." she sobbed, and she giggled at her own
lie, but then her mouth turned down again and he swore aloud and
crushed her to his chest.

This episode of tears was quieter, less desperate, and shorter; and
when it was over she lay, spent, in his arms.

"Scully," he murmured, "I think you should lie down."

He cradled her against his shoulder and reached to pull back her
bedding and stack her pillows.

"I don't want to sleep," she mumbled.

"You don't have to sleep. But I want you to rest before we have to meet
Father Tobey."

With his urging, she lay gingerly down on the sheets, and he pulled the
blankets up to her waist. "What are you going to do?" she asked.

"I'm going to lie right here and watch TV." He scooped up her remote
control and flopped next to her in the bed.

He watched the headlines of the five o'clock news, then switched to the
bottom of the sixth inning of a baseball game. Three minutes of a Bill
Cosby sitcom. . . twenty seconds of CNN. . . a glance at "Hollywood
Squares". . .

He was on HBO when she turned, about to yank the remote out of his
hand, and saw that his eyes were getting sleepy. The remote had slipped
from his grasp and she couldn't see it.

She shook him a little. "Hey. Mulder. We have to meet the priest in 45
minutes."

"Mm-hm."

On the television, a young girl was running, screeching at the top of
her lungs. Scully glanced at the horror flick, and shook Mulder harder.
"Mulder. Wake up."

On the screen, the girl scrambled up the stairs, perching at the top,
wrapping herself into a little ball and moaning in terror, paralyzed in
horror. The music throbbed, and a cadence of heavy thuds pounded in
Scully's ears.

Scully's eyes were forced to the screen, but she continued to rouse her
partner. "Mulder, please turn this off."

And then, a close-up of a bare, bloody foot, missing three toes. The
foot took a step. . . then another step. . . then another. . .

Each step made a resounding thump that seemed to grow louder in
Scully's ears.

The camera traveled up the decaying body, past swaths of rotting
bandages and gaping, pus-seeping wounds, to rest on the monster's face.
It was a woman, her hair hanging in thick, snarled black ropes.

"Bloody Mary on the first step," hissed the creature. <thump> "Bloody
Mary on the second step... <thump> Bloody Mary on the third step. . .
<thump> Bloody Mary's coming to getcha. . ." <THUMP.>

The monster's hair transformed into a ring of hissing, black snakes.

Scully screeched and dove for Mulder, clawing for the remote control.

Nearly asleep, Mulder jolted awake when his partner landed on top of
him, pressing flush against his body. When he opened his eyes, he found
her lying on top of him, her face buried in his shirt.

"Um, hello?"

"Turn. . .it. . .off!"

He fumbled for the remote beneath his hip and aimed it at the
television. In his haste to turn it off, he turned the volume to an
unbearably loud level, and then muted the sound entirely. A second
before the heinous creature was about to jump on the child huddling at
the top of the staircase, Mulder finally fumbled upon the right button
and the TV fell dark.

Cautiously, she lifted her head. He gazed into her wide eyes, although
it was hard to focus at this close proximity without his eyes crossing.
"What happened?"

Her lips were parted, as if she could explain her un-Scully behavior.
She held fistfuls of his shirt as if she was never going to let go and
he could feel the tension coursing through her body.

He could also feel the tension flowing through his own body. He had to
get her away from him, before she felt his body's reaction to her
closeness.

The fear in her eyes melted away, replaced by a slightly raised
eyebrow. She wasn't sure if she really felt him, pressing insistently
against her thigh. Ever so slightly, she gyrated her hips to confirm
her suspicion.

He moaned.

Well, brilliant. If he had somehow managed to hide his raging hard-on
before then, the dying-animal sound creeping from his throat most
certainly gave him away. He knew he looked like an idiot, lying there,
holding his breath, with his partner atop him, still trembling slightly
from her panic.

He tried to be suave. He tried to save himself from looking like a
thirteen-year-old.

He reached up, captured her mouth in his own, and lay back, taking her
with him.

And then the moans were helpless, growing in desperation. At first he
was aware of them roaring in his ears. Then he forgot to listen as his
body insisted that he do something to change the current situation.
Either he had to push her away, or he had to rip her clothes off and
sink inside her.

He pushed her away. Not very far away, but enough so that he could look
into her eyes, gauge her reaction.

She was really gasping now, and her cheeks were flaming red.

She liked it.

Score one for the G-Man.

He wanted to do a victory dance.

Instead, he grinned. "I figured, since you were already here. . . I
mean, why not, right?"

Scully couldn't think. Suddenly, she felt strange, lying there. Was
this her mind's ulterior motive when she'd reacted so strongly to a
made-for-cable movie? She felt suddenly ashamed.

"Did I hurt you? I'm sorry." She began to roll away.

Thinking quickly with what little of his brain was functioning at that
moment, Mulder grasped her hips, pressing her against him. "No, you
don't have to get off."

She offered him a quirky little smile. He returned it, and even blushed
a little. "What I meant was. . . I'd like you to stay right where you
are."

But he sat her up, so that her legs parted and she was flush against
him.

Oh, wow. She felt amazing.

And that was through four layers of clothing.

Assuming they were both wearing underwear.

She <was> wearing underwear, wasn't she?

The possibility that she might not be came, unbidden, into his mind,
and instinctively, his fingers strayed to the insides of her thighs.

She arched her back a little; an involuntary response to the contact
between their bodies. He began to stroke where his hand had strayed;
his fingers inched closer toward the center of her body.

He found the warm, inside seam of her underwear, and traced it with his
fingertip.

Her breath escaped her in a tiny, "Oh."

He couldn't help it; he grabbed her hips and crushed her closer, making
a small circle with his own hips to bring her into more direct contact.

Scully groaned and closed her eyes. Her arms, still supporting her
weight, trembled and threatened to buckle.

The phone rang.

"Don't. . ." he begged breathlessly, his thumbs returning to stroke the
seam of her underwear.

"What if it's important. . ." she gasped, although she didn't appear to
really care.

"It's not."

"What if. . ." She had to stop speaking in order to moan. Then she
breathed, "What if it's Skinner?"

"I don't want to think about him right now."

She was almost ready to melt back into his arms and let the phone ring
until the caller gave up, and then she bolted to a sitting position.

"What if it's Father Tobey?"

That did it. Scully, the good and guilty Catholic, rolled away and
reached for the phone. Mulder gasped at the coldness her absence left
behind.

When his blood began to redistribute itself, he realized that Scully,
perched on the edge of the mattress, had slammed down the phone and was
headed for the bathroom, straightening her blouse.

"What's the matter?" he asked.

"It's Carrie," she said brusquely. "She's gone."

"Gone?" His brain was still sluggish.

"Mulder, meet with Father Tobey. Get as much information as you can."
She was finger-combing her hair with one hand and slipping shoes on
with the other.

"What are you going to do?"

She stood up and grabbed her purse and the car keys. "I'm going to find
my cousin."

He stood up, head-rushed, and sat back down. "Not alone, you're not."

"It's me she wants, Mulder, not you."

"That doesn't mean you're safe."

She turned to him, her hands on her slim hips. "Mulder." She looked
meaningfully at his crotch.

He looked down. "Oh."

He headed for the bathroom. "Look, give me two minutes, all right?"

She didn't respond. He turned back. "Scully. Two minutes."

He walked into the bathroom and closed the door. A moment later, she
heard the shower turn on.

She reached for her gun holster; fastened it around her torso. She
couldn't wait. Carrie wasn't safe, wherever she was.

And Scully had a pretty clear guess where she'd been taken.

"I'm sorry," she whispered, both to herself and to him, and then opened
the door of her room.

END (4/6)

From: Alcott <alcott@chillylegumes.com>
Date: Wed, 03 Nov 1999 10:42:54 -0600
Subject: xfc: REPOST: Bloody Mary (5 of 6)
Source: xfc

From: Alcott <alcott@chillylegumes.com>

Title: Bloody Mary
Author: Alcott
(See part one for further info.)


Scully caught the reflection of eyes in her headlights as she pulled the

rental car up to the Hell House.

When she opened the car door and slammed it behind her, her flashlight
beam caught the animal- a deer, probably- scampering off, crunching
autumn leaves in its wake.

As the sound faded, it was replaced by a whisper in her ear.

"Dana. . ."

The hairs on the back of her neck stood on end, and she turned. There
was no one behind her. The empty branches of the trees waved in the
wind.

It was the wind, she chided herself. Taking a deep breath, she walked up

to the house that loomed in the dusk of approaching night.

Her flashlight beams were unnecessary inside the house. A red light came

like a beacon from the Ouija board lying in the middle of the adjacent
parlor, its beams illuminating the foyer as well.

Beside the board, the young girl knelt. In the frigid autumn night, she
wore only her hospital gown. Her feet were dirty and bleeding, her skin
was turning blue.

Carrie lifted her head, brought blank eyes to stare at Scully.

"She's been waiting for you."

Scully gazed around the room, looking for a spirit to address. "All
right, I'm here. It's what you wanted, right? I'm here. Let her go."

The mirror in the parlor began to hum and glow. The plaster walls behind

the mirror began to crack and crumble.

The mirror shook, and with a sound akin to the sound of bones breaking,
the cracks made so many years ago restored themselves. When the glass
was pristine and whole, Audrah appeared there, smiling.

"I knew you'd come."

Scully faced off with the mirror. "Let her go back to the hospital."

"You have the planchette," Audrah said. "Let me out."

"And then what?"

Her cousin smiled. "It will all be over."

Scully reached into her pocket and retrieved the planchette, the same
one Melissa had tucked into her pocket so many years before. Scully had
found it in a box while cleaning out her sister's apartment, and had
tucked it away before her mother could see it.

Now, she held it over her head. "Let Carrie leave the house first."

Audrah nodded.

"Carrie." Scully cleared the tremor from her throat. "Carrie, get up and

go wait in the car, all right?"

Carrie moaned and crawled toward the door. Grasping the knob of the open

door, she pulled herself to stand, and then staggered into the night.

Now Scully was truly alone. She lifted her chin and murmured the first
prayer that came into her mind. "Hail Mary, full of grace," she
whispered to herself. "The Lord is with thee. . ."

Scully slammed the planchette to the hardwood floor, damning it for the
heartache it had caused.

Prisms of light exploded as the glass inside the planchette shattered
into a million pieces. The shards glittered in light, then exploded into

flames.

Amidst the broken glass and tiny flames, Audrah appeared. She still wore

the sweater she'd been wearing the night she disappeared. Her hair was
still long.

She was still sixteen.

But her eyes were emitting a red light that nearly blinded Scully. She
shielded her own eyes with one hand while aiming her revolver with the
other.

"Ahhhh," Audrah sighed in a voice far too deep to belong to a girl her
age. "Hello, Dana."

The flames around her began to grow, but she didn't feel their burn. The

ripped, moldy curtains hanging from the windows began to smolder.

Scully watched as the flames crawled toward the walls. "We have to get
out of here, Audrah."

"Agent Scully?"

Carrie appeared in the foyer, her face pinched. She stumbled forward and

grabbed Scully's arm. "Come on!"

"Carrie, get out of here!"

The girl, so meek and frightened, now stood her ground. "I'm not coming
without you. You're going to get hurt!"

The fire was licking at the ceiling now. Audrah peered at the girl with
fury in those light-filled eyes, and Carrie's feet left the ground.

"Agent Scully!"

Carrie was lifting now toward the ceiling, toward the fire that began to

roll across the ceiling. The child was screaming as she propelled slowly

toward the flames.

"No!" Scully aimed her weapon at her cousin and pulled the trigger.

Audrah flinched against the wound, but only smiled as the girl drew
closer and closer to the fire. Carrie, sucking in air to scream, began
to choke instead. Smoke barreled down from the ceiling, enveloping her,
hiding her from sight.

Scully pulled the trigger again, and again, and again. It did nothing
but caused her cousin to smile. Finally, Scully slammed her weapon to
the floor. "What do you want!?"

Audrah laughed, a laugh that resounded with the singing of demons. "She
wants you. She has me and she has Melissa. . ."

Tears burned Scully's eyes. "You do not have my sister. She's. . ." She
began to choke, her hands clutching her throat.

Carrie screamed. Inches before the fire would touch her, she jerked to a

stop, as if she'd reached the end of a bungee rope.

"Dana?" The voice coming from Audrah's mouth was now warm and familiar
and long-missed. "Dana, you have to help me. They've got me trapped."

The fire forgotten, her terror forgotten, Scully whimpered, "Missy?"

"Dana, I miss you. Come with me. We'll be together again. . ."

"It's a trick," Scully whispered.

Carrie lurched again toward the fire.

"All right!" Scully screamed. "Let Carrie go. I'll do what you want."
She bowed her head. "I'll do what you want."

Carrie dropped to the floor. Scully could almost feel the girl's bones
breaking as she struck the ground.

Scully doubled over, gasping for air. Bleeding hands touched her
shoulders, forcing her to lift her head. Audrah grasped Scully's face in

her hands and hissed, "Say it, Dana."

"No. . ." Scully moaned.

"Say it, or I take the girl."

Tears were streaking Scully's cheeks and she gasped,
"B-bloody Mary. . ."

"Again."

"B-b. . ." Scully bent over, choking. She was yanked back to a standing
position.

Her cousin's eyes were hard and burning with fire. "Say it."

"Bloody-" But Scully couldn't do it. Her body was succumbing to the
fire.  Her knees buckled.

Again, Audrah yanked her back up.

"Bloody Mary," Scully sobbed.

"One more time," Audrah crooned. "One more time, and it changes
forever."

Scully drew in her breath, preparing to speak the words and seal the
pact.

"In the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit!"

Audrah dropped her hold on Scully and whirled with a hiss to the
intruder.

Father Tobey stood in the doorway, making the sign of the cross with one

hand and sprinkling holy water with the other.

Mulder stepped from behind him, gathering Carrie into his arms and
bolting from the building.

"Mary, I command you to take leave of this person and be gone from this
place!" Father Tobey shouted.

The priest closed his eyes and began to chant in Latin. Audrah shrieked
and Scully fell into a heap, nearly overwhelmed by smoke. From the
floor, she looked up through the haze in time to see the light pour like

molten lava from her cousin's eyes, then swirl above them in a tornado
of fire. The fire rose and hurtled until it was indistinguishable from
the rest of the flames.

Audrah's body, riddled with bullets from Scully's gun, collapsed to the
floor, her life spent.

Scully closed her eyes with resignation and held her breath. There was
no room in her lungs for air anymore; her head began to float.

So, she thought, this is how it ends.

She searched her muddled mind for a Scripture verse, and stumbling upon
one, she whispered, "Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow

of death, I will fear no evil. . ."

"Dammit, Scully, you couldn't have just waited two minutes?"

The voice was Mulder's, and she felt herself being lifted in his arms. A

moment later, she was in cold, crisp air, but still she couldn't
breathe. Then she heard the voices of others, and felt an oxygen mask
come down over her face.

"Come on, Scully, take deep breaths. Deeper, deeper. Come on, Scully."

She tried to do what he told her to do, but it was so hard. Then
something inside her lungs loosened, and she began to choke and gag.

Mulder thumped her on the back. "Good, Scully, Keep coughing. We've got
to get that stuff out of your lungs."

With every earth-shattering cough, her lungs ached more and more, but
she felt the air begin to flow inside them. Her vision began to clear,
and she saw swirls of red lights from the ambulances and fire engines
that surrounded her. Mulder was kneeling on her right side, a paramedic
to her left. Father Tobey sat down beside Mulder and began to stroke her

forehead, his own face blackened with soot. "It's all right, my child,"
he murmured.

"Carrie," she rasped.

"She's on her way to the hospital," Mulder replied. "Right now it looks
like there's a few broken ribs and maybe a concussion."

"Father Tobey," she rasped. "Are you all right?"

"Physically? Yes," he smiled. "But wait until my superiors get word of
this."

"Tell them it was a matter of life or death," Mulder said.

Scully struggled to sit up, to turn and look behind her, and Mulder took

her arm, maneuvering her. Weakened, she leaned against him, and he
wrapped her in his arms.

She felt the heat of the fire on her face, and watched, dry-eyed, as the

fire licked and consumed what was left of the Hell House.

END (5/6)

From: Alcott <alcott@chillylegumes.com>
Date: Wed, 03 Nov 1999 10:43:43 -0600
Subject: xfc: REPOST: Bloody Mary (6 of 6)
Source: xfc

From: Alcott <alcott@chillylegumes.com>

Title: Bloody Mary
Author: Alcott
(See part one for further info.)

EPILOGUE

The next morning
10 a.m.

The last of the firefighters were packing their gear, paying no heed to
the smoldering pile of burnt wood and disintegrated curtains behind
them.

However, they did steal glances at the woman who stood, dressed in a
black coat that hung below her knees, her auburn hair pulled sharply
back from her face. Her skin seemed to be pulled taut over her
cheekbones, and the dark circles under her eyes were even darker against

the paleness of her skin.

The other FBI agent, the one had watched over the woman like a lioness
watching over her cubs the night before, approached from behind.

Scully felt his presence but didn't acknowledge it at first. He was the
first to speak. "Did the doctor say it was all right for you to leave
the hospital, or did you go against medical advisement?"

"How's Father Tobey?" The fact she didn't answer the question did not go

unnoticed by either of them.

"He's fine. His parish caught wind of what happened last night and he's
already receiving casseroles."

She smiled, but didn't tear her eyes from the remains of the house.
Mulder dropped his eyes, scuffing his toe in the dirt. "You should have
waited for me last night."

"I don't always need your help, Mulder."

Anger bubbled inside him. "Well, you sure as hell weren't saving the
world last night by yourself!"

She was furious. "Look, do you think it was easy for me to be rescued by

the Calvary? To know that Carrie nearly died, to know those girls all
died because of what we did? To know that I shot and killed my own
cousin?"

His voice softened. "She died years ago. . ."

She shook her head vehemently, and crossed her arms, turning her face
back to the ruins.

He gnawed on his lower lip for a second, remembering the anger he'd
known when he'd realized she hadn't waited for him, and the panic he'd
felt when he and Father Tobey had found the house in flames. How he had
been nearly immobilized with the fear that perhaps he'd been too late.

And he thought of the scared girl Scully had been, barely older than a
child, witnessing an unspeakable horror and then spending the next
twenty-one years shoving it out of her mind.

He reached and took her hand in his. When she didn't pull away, he
squeezed gently. "It's over, Scully," he said quietly. "Do you believe
that?"

Her face was a mask of sadness, but she managed a quirky little smile.
"Maybe someday, Mulder. Maybe someday."

He squeezed her hand again. "Let's go home."

Scully nodded, and finally, turned her back on the past.

END (6/6)


Author's notes: A special thanks to Kirky, who beta-read this story for
me, and who told me about Hell House and her Ouija board experiences.
She was also my source for all things Catholic.
Thanks also to Tami and Paige, who stroked my ego as I was writing. For
more info on Bloody Mary and other urban legends, check out
http://www.snopes.com/
Dedicated to the other fifth-grade girls who did the Bloody Mary thing
with me so many years ago and to the teacher who said the words I'll
never forget: "If you ask for the devil, he will come." Brrrrrrrr.....

