The Children's Teeth: Sister's Blood 10/16 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The weapons of our warfare are not merely human. They possess God's power for the destruction of strongholds." 2 Corinthians 10: 4 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ And so began the only time of my life I can almost call "peaceful." Five years of such peace, actually, give or take a few months. The rigorous routine of the Discalced Carmelites was not a burden to me but a relief. I never was forced to participate in their rituals, but I was included and treated with respect nonetheless. As for my name... well, all the other sisters knew *what* I was, and I heard from time to time that one or the other of them was fasting for my spiritual edification, for the good of my soul. My soul. I would have laughed had They given me a sense of humor. But at the cloister I was given a new name. I wore the brown habit jumper and white blouse of a novice. They called me simply, "Sister." I found that appropriate, for "Sister" is the one thing I have always been. I followed the way of Carmel for five years, if only in the motions but not in any belief of my own. I woke at 5:30 each morning, washed up, and went to Chapel for Morning Prayer. Then, Morning Prayer was followed by a sort of quiet time called "Mental Prayer." At first, I wasn't entirely sure how to use this time. Eventually, the Mother Prioress taught me all sorts of meditation tools. They were easy for me to use with my sharpened imagination. They didn't give me any earth-changing mystical experience of the Sister's God, but they did give me an undeniable peace. The peace helped. I think the peace set the stage for future healing. Then, it was time for Mass with Father Timothy, who shared the gatehouse with Joseph. Father Tim was a portly man who had an illness that had disfigured his hands. His voice as he chanted the prayers of the Mass was a bit nasal, but he always smiled at me kindly. He never showed any dismay that I did not take the sacraments. He would wave a gesture of blessing in my direction, nodding at me and whispering, "Sister." There were at least two hours each day devoted only to reading. When I first heard this -- I think that was when I held my first smile. And there were books to read -- new books I had never seen before: The Bible, //The Interior Castle// by Therese of Lisieux, the writings of St. Teresa of Avila, foundress of the Discalced Carmelites. Poetry. The complete works of Thomas Merton. The ideas and ideals I now received were novel, but I was not ready to accept them as my own. They included so much talk of a loving, creative God. I could not believe that a loving God could have allowed the creation of a monster like me. Still, I began a collection. The verses I liked I would write down on bits of paper and stash them in my pillowcase. Sometimes, I would bring those slips of paper to Chapel with me and use them for Mental Prayer time. As the years passed, my pillow became too rustly with the scraps, so the Mother Prioress gave me a notebook and I copied into there those bits of verbal nourishment. Our days were framed by something called "The Liturgy of the Hours," which, according to the sisters, transformed the entire day's activities into a prayer: from the smallest wiping of a dish to the hours spent in adoring meditation before their Blessed Sacrament. Morning prayer, mid-morning prayer, mid-day prayer and examination of conscience, grace before a leisurely lunch, mid-afternoon prayer, Vespers at 4:15 on the button, and the Office of Readings and Night Prayer. Then bed and exhausted, dreamless sleep. That frame was colored in with simple hard work. In my first life, I learned how to morph other faces onto my own, how to become other people and how to kill in cold blood. Now I learned how to do laundry, how to pick apples and make apple butter, how to sweep and wash dishes and bake bread and how to weave. I was especially good at weaving. There was such an order to it -- the absorbing task of warping the loom, of winding the shuttles and pressing the treadles with my sandal-shod feet. Sister Frances and Sister Mary Therese would complain about "drowning in a sea of brown thread." I swam in that sea, blissfully, mindlessly lost. I grew stronger. I learned how to give myself the injections I had always relied on others to administer. I learned how the other sisters hid vials of the serum among the styrofoam peanuts used in shipping crates of our Cloister's apple butter, so that the serum could be distributed without Their knowledge. The Mother Prioress showed me the secret stash of the liquid hidden among the jars of apple butter behind a loose stone in the basement wall -- hidden just in the unlikely case They should ever find out just what was going on in that big stone house in Wexford, PA. I think those five years spent under the spell of the Cloister weighted my loyalties for me. This planet began to woo me and win me. The flurry of the spring wind carrying apple blossoms to the ground, the kiss of snowflakes melting on my cheeks as I lugged firewood to the hearth inside, the snap of fallen leaves beneath my sandals, the tickle of summer humidity sending the white puffs of milkweed pods sinking to the ground... there were times when the changing of the planet's seasons erased all pain from my mind and threatened to make me glad to be alive. Those were the times I could almost forget what I was. I could almost forget that I was in this world, but not of it. The six women who called me their "Sister" seemed to act like they had forgotten what I was, even if I couldn't. My weaving partners, Sisters Frances and Mary Therese, had taken their perpetual vows a few months before my arrival. Before that, they had worn the white blouse and brown jumper of the novice. Sister Frances was short - about my height - ten years older than me, and much possessed of both a talent for drawing and a very dry wit. Sister Mary Therese had a great shock of curly blond hair under her habit's veil, and she was always laughing about something. She could play the violin. Before she took her vows her name had been "Heather." "You changed your name?" I asked her. She laughed her broad, musical laugh. "*I* didn't change it. The Mother Prioress changed it for me." "Why?" I asked her. I had so much to learn. She explained to me, "The taking of a new name symbolizes the change in our lives. Now that I belong in this world and not the world outside, my identiy has changed, too. Before the Cloister, I was Heather. Now, I am called Mary Therese." The Mother Prioress had not given me a name other than "Sister," so that's what I was called. I was "Sister" to Mary Therese, Frances, Anne, Cecilia Bernadette, Helen Gabriel, and even to Mother Prioress. Each in her own way taught me something new: herbals and cooking from Helen Gabriel, cleaning and fire-building from Anne, a little bit of sewing and calligraphy from Cecilia Bernadette. The Mother Prioress, however, taught me how she survived Them. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ It was so simple. So simple, in fact, I am sure They never feared anyone would have thought of it. But the Mother Prioress had, and it had worked. Before joining the convent, she had earned herself a PhD in Optical Physics -- the study of light. The tool she discovered had little if anything to do with light, but it had everything to do with invisible force. One afternoon, after I had finished my turn at washing and drying the lunch dishes, the Mother Prioress called me into her office. When I sat in the chair she indicated I should take, she held her closed right fist out to me. She was holding something. With her eyes, she told me to open out my hand and accept it. She understood that I did not want to be touched, and she always respected that wish. When something cool and solid dropped into my palm, all I could do was stare stupidly at it for what seemed like a full minute. "It's a magnet," I observed simply. The Mother Prioress' eyes shone again. She shook her head. "It's freedom." "I don't understand," I told her honestly. She sat down behind her tidy wooden desk, wincing at the arthritis in her back as she did so. "The chips They use to track us," she began, "cannot be taken out." I frowned, trying to remember what little I knew about the neck-chips. "There's a self-destruct process that begins if the chip is removed from the subject." The Mother Prioress nodded. "Chip removal triggers a terminal cancer." I looked back down at the cool, dark metal in my palm. "What does a magnet have to do with it?" Her cryptic smile grew; she noticed that I was learning how to ask questions. "How could the tracking mechanism of the chip be destroyed without removing it, do you think?" So it was to be the Socratic Method. I chewed thoughtfully on my inner lip. A magnet? It looked absolutely harmless -- hardly the menacing metal point to which I was accustomed. What could a magnet do? Or, rather, what could a magnet do to a delicate little chip containing both tracking equipment, biological information, and neurochemichal commands? A harmless magnet //could// destroy an electronic tracking device... "No," I almost laughed. "Mother Prioress, that's too easy." "Isn't it, though?" "But how could you possibly know it works?" I leaned heavily on the word "know." She nodded with respect at my skepticism. "A long time ago, when you were just a girl I think, there were attempts at mass abduction. Many people who had these chips in their necks were... were 'called' to certain places. Many were destroyed. I was called as well, but I was able to refuse the call. That is how I know this magnet works." I looked disbelieving at the solid gray metal bar in my open palm. "But Mother Prioress, how do you know the magnet was responsible for that? Maybe it was just you -- you were strong enough to resist--" "Sister," she interrupted me, "have you looked closely at the necks of your fellow sisters in this cloister?" I nearly dropped the magnet. Half-confused, but half-stunned because I understood what she was implying, I shook my head slowly. "Everyone in this cloister has been able to resist Their calling, thanks to that magnet that is too simple to do any damage. That, and the will of God, of course." How could I not have noticed? It was so obvious, but I had been so absorbed with my own learning and my own safety that I had been oblivious. So this was how my Cloister sisters resisted: with the unseen power of prayers and magnets. The unexpected threat is the greatest threat of all. The Mother Prioress leaned back thoughtfully in her chair. Her voice lilted with a yet to be issued challenge. "Now do you understand, Sister?" I nodded and stretched out my arm to return the magnet, but the Mother Prioress held her hand up in a gesture of refusal. The magnet weighed heavily on my palm. "What do you want me to do with this?" I asked her. "What do you want to do?" She asked me in return. I still did not yet have an answer. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Joseph was around, but not often. I've read enough fairy tales in my time to know what was *supposed* to have happened. My savior and I were supposed to fall madly, daintily in love and live together happily ever after. Well, that did not happen. During those peaceful five years, I hardly ever saw him, really. He was usually off galavanting around God knows where, presumably seeking out others like ourselves, recruiting them away from Them, demagnetizing chips or some other heroics. I was too busy falling in love with this earth and pondering my place in it to take either much notice or offense. He did come home for holidays sometimes. He sat in the back of the Cloister chapel for every Easter Mass. At holiday dinners, he and Father Tim sat around the table with the rest of the sisters, who showed a friendly reverence for their priest and a motherly affection for Joseph. The sisters listened intently to Father's words, nodding in loyal assent as he informed them about the further advances of Vatican II, the need for increased prayers for the Holy Father. However, the sisters also made sure Joseph finished his mashed potatoes and asked him, "Are you getting enough to eat out there, Mr. Fauchlevent?" He was the son They had taken from the sisters, and the sisters fussed over him accordingly. We did not talk much, Joseph and I. Like the other sisters, I called him "Mr. Fauchlevent" those rare times I addressed him directly. Those rare times he addressed me directly, he called me "Sister" and nothing more. I suppose he was giving me time and space to find the peace I so desperately needed. But as I learned in my readings of the sisters' Bible, "To everything there is a season...," and my time of peace came to its inevitable close. END 10/16 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ There is an appointed time for everything, and a time for every affair under the heavens. A time to scatter stones, and a time to gather them; a time to embrace, and a time to be far from embraces. A time to love, and a time to hate; a time of war, and a time of peace." --Ecclesiastes 3: 1, 5, 8 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ It was autumn. November 25, actually. I remember the date because that morning at Mass we had celebrated the feast day of St. Catherine of Alexandria -- the patroness of philosophers, students, of women divinely appointed and sent by God to convert men... After five years, my head was brimming full with the sisters' knowledge. Thanksgiving was near, and Joseph usually came home for that, spending a few days at the Cloister raking leaves with us and preparing the kitchen and herb gardens for winter. So as I swept the great hall leading to the entrance way, I was not surprised at the rattle of Joseph's war-weary car pulling into the Cloister driveway. The doorbell rang loudly in the otherwise silent Cloister. From her office near the front of the house, The Mother Prioress bustled as quickly as her arthritic knees allowed, and when she opened the front door, I froze, staring, disbelieving. I was surprised to see that Joseph Fauchlevent had brought someone to the Cloister with him -- Agent Scully, my mother. My hands began to shake so badly I accidentally dropped the broom. I picked it up from the floor, leaned it against the wall, and listened. I was at the far end of the hall, and their voices were softened, so I could not hear them clearly. For the seeming eternity they held their hushed conversation, I nervously fumbled with the small gold cross I always wore, not out of personal belief, but in the same way I wore my novice's habit: because it had been given to me, and I didn't want *not* to wear it. "You're going to need it," had been my mother's words to me five years before. At twenty-three I still could not make sense of those words, nor of the meaning behind the simple joining of a horizontal line with a vertical line. Five years in a cloister taught me the *story* behind the cross, of course, but that's all it was -- just another story. Down the hall, Agent Scully stepped just slightly to the left, peering around the broad shoulders of the Mother Prioress. My mother saw me and recognized me. I chilled with irrational apprehension when I squinted and saw her lips form that same proud smile she had offered me on my deathbead. After five years of hearing nothing from me, she still believed in me? She could not take her eyes off of me. I looked down at my hands and folded them before me. Mother Prioress turned to look at me as well. "Sister," she called to me across the entrance hall. I looked up, meeting the Mother Prioress' eyes, if only to avoid Agent Scully's, which were so like my own. "My office, if you please," she asked, her voice strong across the distance. I nodded with sisterly obedience and followed them into the office of our prioress. Rarely did more than two people come in to talk to the Mother Prioress at once, so there were only two chairs sitting opposite her desk. The Mother Prioress indicated for Agent Scully to take a seat, which she did, but not without first looking at me once more. I shifted uncomfortably under her gaze. I could tell she wanted to reach out to me, to hold me like the firstborn baby girl They never let her cradle in her arms. I stiffened my back, willing her to understand my body language if nothing else. Joseph looked at me and waved his hand toward the other empty chair, but I shook my head, preferring to stand -- perhaps so I could run should instinct or some other urge dictate that I do so. The wrinkles in the Mother Prioress' face deepened in an expression of pained worry. She folded her hands in front of her. "First, we will pray," she commanded. Joseph and Agent Scully bowed their heads along with the Mother Prioress. I did not, however. I wanted to see what was happening. For support, I leaned back against the wall. I knew something was about to happen. The Mother Prioress rattled off some spontaenous prayer of her own. I don't remember the words she used. All I remember was my palms growing clammy, my heart thumping painfully beneath the shell of my ribs, the hum of that long-lost foe -- Sister Anxiety -- buzzing in my ears. Something was about to happen. Something already was happening -- already had happened -- and the two visitors had come to let me know what that was. The Mother Prioress's prayer comcluded, closed by the three "Amens" spoken aloud. I remained in anticipatory silence. The Mother Prioress commanded Mr. Fauchelevent -- my Joseph -- to tell me what he had just told her in the entrance hall. I don't remember the exact words he used, but I remember the gist: Their mass abductions were starting again full force. Their Project, suddenly and unexpectedly thrown off track decades ago, was now back into play. Decades -- a mere blink of time in the cosmic sense. After giving me this information, all three were silent. I searched each face individually. Joseph's face was blank as he awaited my response. The Mother Prioress knitted her brows together, but her expression told me no details of the cause of her worry. Agent Scully -- my mother -- was also worried. I could feel her concern like static electricity: invisible on her blank-set face, but charging the distance I had put between us with an undeniable current. The room filled with my silence. All three were waiting for me to respond to this information. At last, I spoke. I answered with a question. "Why are you telling me this?" Joseph shifted in his chair and turned to face me more fully. He looked down briefly, then he leveled his gaze directly at me, pinning me to the wall with his eyes. I never before had seen him so merciless. I quickly wondered if it was really *my* Joseph, the Cloister's "Mr. Fauchelevent," but that worry fled when I saw the tiniest ghost of a smile tug at the corners of his mouth -- a small, reluctant, bittersweet smile, but a genuine smile nonetheless, softening his necessity-borne harshness. "I've come to ask you," he answered, "for your help." I leaned more heavily on the wall. *The Resistance.* "There are only so many of us who can slip through the cracks in Their Project," he explained, thoughtful lines pinching the corners of his eyes. The way he said "They" was clearly upper-case. "We need all the help we can get," he finished. "Why did you bring her?" I asked him, my voice sounding cold with a distant defense. Joseph opened his mouth to speak, but he was interrupted. "I came here, essentially," my mother answered, uaffected by my wariness, "to talk you into staying here, in the Cloister, in Wexford." If I hadn't already pressed my back to the wall, I would have taken a step backwards. I finally found the courage to look my mother in the eyes. Eyes so much like my own. "Why?" My voice was a dry, apprehensive croak. Her brow furrowed as she searched for the right words. Finally, she said, "Because leaving is too dangerous." Because I am her daughter, the child of her pain. Because I represent so much that has been lost, so much that has been regained and returned at impossible odds against Their all-powerful plans. "Because," she continued, her voice growing raspy with the tears she again would not release, "if you were my daughter Meg, I would not let you go." My sister, my target. I had forgotten her name. A picture of that sunny Sunday sprang to my mind. In my imagination, a nine year-old girl scrambled down a driveway chasing a runaway basketball. A mess of curly golden hair framed a secure, well-loved smile. A sense of humor. All things I could never have, could never be. Because of Them. And I had a choice. I turned back to Joseph. "What do you want me to do?" He frowned slightly. Once again, I was asked, "What do you want to do?" I looked to the Mother Prioress, my eyes pleading for her guidance. Her face read something akin to Agent Scully's worry. Her voice was pained as she echoed, "Sister, you have a choice." She wanted me to choose for myself. Again I looked to each face staring back at me waiting for my response. I could not make a decision that quickly. I hadn't had enough practice in such things. "I need to think about it," I said, walking to the office door. No one stopped me. They let me go. As slowly and calmly as I could, I made my way over to the coat closet and wrapped myself up in the big, brown woolen coat I had made for myself my first winter at the Cloister. The stitching was uneven, necessitating multiple repairs, but it was something I could almost call my own. Its warmth was a comfort. I began to walk out of the Cloister to the apple orchard, the trees bare of leaves in preparation for the coming winter. As I walked, I became acutely aware of Mother Prioress' magnet banging against my thigh through the pocket of my novice's habit. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I wandered the barren orchard for the better part of an hour, I think, pondering what to do. It was a windy day, and bits of crushed dead leaves kept flying up into my eyes. The habit veil holding my hair down kept whipping around, ready to fly off into the gusts at any minute if I weren't careful. My skirt slapped around my legs. My fingers grew white with the cold, so I jammed my hands deep into my pockets. I turned the smooth, solid magnet inside over and over in the fingers of my right hand. I took my hands out of my pockets just once so I could pull my veil more tightly over my freezing ears. The cold was within and without, but it did not chase me back into the shelter of the Cloister. Again, I had a choice. The fireplaces and ever-present oil heat of the Cloister house beckoned. Still, I remained outside, studying the gnarled, knotted trunks of the apple trees, memorizing their patterns -- patterns I had seen nearly every day for the past five years but never really took the time to notice. I would have loved to have had a book with me, to erase all choices from my my mind with the pains and adventures of some fictional character, but to get reading material would have necessitated a trip back inside to the Cloister library. I feared that if I returned indoors I would never want to leave again. So I stared through wind-watered eyes at the trees. This mindless activity consumed me until I heard the back door leading from the Cloister to the orchard open and slam shut. My mother was walking towards me across the orchard. I couldn't bear to watch her for long, the wind pulling her red hair in all directions despite its being not even chin-length. I wondered if her hair had always been this shade. I saw no hint of gray. She had to color it, to cover up the manifestations that this world was wearing even on her. Again, I studied the knots and twists of the tree trunks. "Emily." Her voice carried on the wind, was not obliterated by it. I had not been called by that name in five years. I did not look up. "How do you know it's starting again?" I asked. I had to ask. To make an informed decision, I needed all possible evidence. "Where's your proof?" Something in her flinched at my questions, at my mistrust, my skepticism. "Because," she answered me, her even voice still riding steady on the wind, "I was there." Only then did I look up. I was genuinely startled. Such a simple, obvious answer. They were tracking and calling her, too. Still. And in my habit skirt pocket I held the means of stopping that call. If only I would reach out, I could set my mother free. "And this time," she said, looking at the tree that previously had held all my attention, "I remember what happened very clearly." I did not want to know what happened. I didn't need to know, so I did not ask. Selfish of me, I know, but those were my thoughts at the time. I had problems of my own to be unraveled. I tried to think of another question to ask. I guess I was stalling again. "Where's your partner?" She looked up at the overcast sky. "He's home," she answered simply. "With my sister?" I had to ask. She raised surprised eyes to meet mine. "My little sister," I specified. Her lips curled thoughtfully inward. "Yes. Mulder's home with Meg." "Why?" She breathed deeply in, then out, squinting as another gust of wind pushed at us both. "Some things a woman needs to do on her own." I fixed my eyes on a bulging knot in the nearest tree trunk. "Does your daughter know about..." My voice cracked slightly on "your daughter," and I stopped myself. I almost asked if my little sister knew about //me//, but to do so would mean asking if she also knew about Merchant and Abbot, Lynch and Sim. "Does she know about *us*?" On the word "us" I pointed to myself in the hopes that Agent Scully might understand. "There is a lot she doesn't know," she admitted. "Mulder and I agreed she's still too young to..." And her voice faltered. The wind filled the silence obligingly until Agent Scully, my mother, found the right words. "She's still too young to understand... certain things." I did the math in my head quickly. "She's sixteen." "Sixteen," Agent Scully nodded. "And you just turned twenty-three." She remembered. In her voice, I sensed a fierce protectiveness borne of the knowledge of dreadful, extreme possibilities. And, God only knew why, that protectiveness extended to me as well. She looked at me again, and I let her look into my eyes despite myself. "All grown up," she said, the proud smile returning. What did she have to be proud of in me? I reminded myself of that promise I had made to myself when I was eighteen, wearing her clothes and making my escape. I had vowed to make myself *worthy* of her pride. Had I done that yet? I glanced down at my shabby, handmade coat. An accomplishment, but not a source of deep pride, when with what They had inadvertently given me, I *could* be doing so much more. "All grown up," Agent Scully repeated, "but I don't -- I don't want you put yourself at risk. There are others who can do that." But if there were so many others, why did Joseph come asking for me? With shaking hands, I reached out to run my fingertips against the bark of the apple tree. The mythical Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. The tree where Man had made a choice. In contrast, the tree the Sisters of the Cloister used to make good, sweet foods for many to enjoy. The tree of the sisters alibi for their serum- shipping operation. The Tree of both Good and evil to be sure. I stepped closer to the tree, and the movement caused the magnet in my pocket to hit me in the thigh with a reminder slap. I raised my eyes and looked to my mother again. "You were there?" She winced, I guess at the memory of Their call. The same wince I've caught on my reflection in the mirror when I think of... *him*, my tutor. She nodded. Still shaking with fear at what I was about to do, I reached into my right pocket and brought forth the magnet, the tool of freedom Mother Prioress had bequeathed to me. I stepped closer to Agent Scully, confusing her when I craned to look at the back of her neck. Eyes trained well in another life found the tiny mark easily. Hands trained to help in this latest life of mine touched the magnet to the spot on my mother's neck. I held it there a moment, then pulled away, stepped back, and shoved my cold hands back into my pockets. It was the closest I had come to willingly touching another person since that day I had taken the stiletto and plunged it into *his* neck. But if I were to return to this world good for all the evil that had been bred and nurtured into me, I would have to learn to touch and be touched. Touch is not always hurtful, and isolation is not always safety. But those are easy thoughts to think, however difficult to live after the lives I've led. My touching the magnet to my mother's neck: it was a start. "You're free," I told my mother. Her eyes pulled smaller in disbelief. "You'll see," I replied to her skepticism. "Can you find others for me to free? I then asked. "How many other lives can we save?" My words upset my mother. She shook her head, her blue eyes clouding with more of her instinctive protectiveness. "Emily..." And I responded with my my need -- instinctive or learned? nature or nurture? -- to undo all They had done in the name of Their Project. To undo all of the crimes in which They had engineered me to take part. I responded with a very human need: the need for independence. "Please let me go..." That wasn't what I wanted to say. I wanted to say, "Mommy, please let me go," but I still could not say that word. At least, not out loud. Pain and pride colored my mother's face, a combination I have never seen with such clarity on any other. Again, I could tell she wanted to hold me... and I wanted to be held, to feel safe in the arms of my mother, but I still was not ready. I took a small step backwards to let her know. Agent Scully looked back at the Cloister house. She asked, "Are you ready to go back?" She meant go back to the Cloister, but she also meant back out to the real world, the world They were working to conquer and subdue. My hands still shook, but not even my own trepidation could stop me. I could make a difference. I could bring healing to a weak world, freedom to those enslaved. I could distinguish myself from the three others who shared my DNA and my first name. "Some things," I said, nodding, "a woman needs to do on her own." Agent Scully and I, mother and oldest daughter, had reached an understanding. We leaned into the wind and returned to the Cloister so I could prepare to leave it. END 11/16 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Through the Spirit one receives faith; by the same Spirit another is given the gift of healing and still another miraculous powers... But it is still one and the same Spirit who produces all these gifts, distributing them to each as he wills." 1 Corinthians 12: 9-11 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ As Agent Scully and I walked together to the Mother Prioress' office to inform her of my decision, the bell for Vespers rang. The life before me and the life I was living had their first clash, but Agent Scully thought quickly. "You're going to need clothes," she said, pointing to my novice garb. She was right. I nodded, a bit embarassed I hadn't thought of that fact. There was so much I hadn't thought of, even in my desire to make an informed decision. "I'll go," my mother said, "get some clothes and things for you." My mother was going shopping for me. How normal. "I don't know my size," I told her. She looked at me carefully. "Don't worry. I think I can handle it." She was noticing that, were it not for her high-heeled shoes, we would have been the exact same height, the exact same size. And, with nothing more than a parting smile, she went off to find Joseph and his car keys. I hurried to the chapel for Vespers -- for the last time. I kept silent through the chanting, the familiar call and response. I did not even listen to the readings. I wish I had listened. Perhaps I could have gleaned some courage and meaning from the words. My nerve began to wane, however, during Mental Prayer. I stole looks around the chapel at the untroubled faces of the sisters, focused in prayer before their Blessed Sacrament. The Body and Blood of Christ were present as always in the golden tabernacle, and the sisters sat transfixed, enraptured by what seemed to me little more than skinny wafers and fermented grapes. These women had sacrificed their entire lives to pray before these things, to offer their entire lives in simple faith that their prayers made a difference "out there." My Mental Prayer was genuine that evening, even if it wasn't directed at the Sisters' God. I wretch lay wrestling again, trying to justify instead my knee-jerk desire to stay at the Cloister. I *could* just take my vows and pray, just like the sisters, and thus achieve their same peace forever. "If the Church is the Body of Christ," the Mother Prioress had explained to me once, "the Discalced Carmelites are the heart -- unseen, but a vital part, pumping blood to all the extremities. We see the work of the hands, we see where the feet take the body, but none of that can be done without the beating of the heart." I looked up to the crucifix over the chapel altar. The wood-carved Christ had blood pouring out of his hands; red blood pumped by his human heart, blood pouring out of the hands he used to heal. I looked down at my own hands, their works fueled by green blood. These same hands had done murder. This same blood could kill with a spilled drop. I looked back up at the representation of Christ above the altar. I knew the stories. He had lived in near anonymity until he was thirty. And, according to the sisters' belief, his death and resurrection brought life to all, conquered death forever. According to the sisters' beliefs, had he chosen to stay in the safety of his mother's house, the whole world would have been different. The Cloister at Wexford would never have existed. And he had a choice, too. "Father, take this cup away," he had prayed -- or so the story went -- the night before the nails had driven into his hands. "But not my will, but Yours be done." He had risked it all, lost it all, gained it all, all out of hope for the human race, fictional character or not. Hope demands a sacrifice. Time for individual Scripture Reading came, and I randomly flipped open the Bible the sisters had given me my first full day at the Cloister. My eyes came to rest on a passage: "Through the Spirit one receives faith; by the same Spirit another is given the gift of healing and still another miraculous powers..." Paul's first letter to the Corinthians. What coincidence I should just happen to open to that reading. I continued drinking in the words, as was my custom. "But it is still one and the same Spirit who produces all these gifts, distributing them to each as he wills." As who wills? No God had given me these gifts, They had. God had not created me, They had. How could these words apply to me, especially since I couldn't even be sure I had a soul? I looked back at my hands. These same hands could heal, if I would only risk to learn how. This blood gave me the chance to hide in Their world and unravel Their tightly- woven plans. My hands. As the sisters would say, I was "called": called to be the hands. My praying had always been hollow and self- centered, when it was supposed to be heaven- bound, selfless, and other-centered. I could only do real damage if I left this warm heart of prayer called The Carmel at Wexford and returned to the outside. And what did I have to fear anyway? The worst They could do was kill me. Would that have been such a loss? My resolve, once weakened, emerged stronger than before Vespers had begun, and I walked into our dining room ready to share my decision with my sisters. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Honestly I was surprised by their response. I always had kept them at arm's length -- literally. But as I told them over dinner that I was going to leave, my announcement was met with silence. Soup spoons lowered to bowls with devestating clatter. Sharply indrawn breaths. Sister Cecilia made a small, whimpering sound. Mary Therese began blinking her eyes fiercely. "Well," the Mother Prioress said, dabbing at the corners of her mouth with her napkin, "sisters, we all saw this coming. Though I must say I had hoped you would perhaps decide to stay and take vows with us." I bored my eyes into my soup bowl, my newfound courage still slow in coming. "I considered it, Mother Prioress. However, I can do the most good outside of the Cloister." "But prayer and contemplation give the greatest possible good," Mary Therese flared, a curl escaping from her veil as she turned her head. "Sister, it's so dangerous out there." Mother Prioress shot Sister Mary Therese the same reproving glance she always shot whenever Mary Therese let her passions get away with her. "Sisters," the Mother Prioress sighed, "we all know each of us is called to a different work. No one work is greater than the other, and no one work is more dangerous than the other. Need I remind you God could call any of us to Him at any time?" The rest of dinner was spent in an uncharacteristically heavy silence. The sisters were going to miss me. No one had ever missed me before. After Night Prayer, on the way to my last night in my Cloister bedroom, the Mother Prioress stopped me in the hall. "Sister, I would like you to consider something before you go." The fear spiked within me again. There was already so much I hadn't considered. Need I be reminded? I nodded for her to continue. "You have never been baptized, have you?" Baptism. The naming of a Christian. The choosing of patron saints who would presumably watch over that soul and interceed for her sake before God. The claiming of a soul's identity for the life that is their loving, creative God.... My head was brimming full of the sisters' knowledge. "No," I answered simply, "I have not." The Mother Prioress spoke no more, but her age-softened eyes urged me to accept her invitation to give my soul and my life to her God. My soul. Somehow, the concept was no longer even remotely funny. "Good night, Mother Prioress," was my only response, as I bowed and walked slowly back to my tiny bedroom for the last time. "Good night, Sister." I stopped, considered. "Please," I said, turning to face her once more in the dim hall, "call me Wexford." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The following morning, Father Tim insisted that I stay long enough to share in a Mass for my safety before taking my leave. Joseph attended the Mass as well. I came to the chapel that last time wearing my mother's clothes, the same I had worn on my original trip to the Cloister. Without my even trying, this time around they fit well. Five years, and I hadn't even noticed the weight I had gained. I was still thin, but no longer bony. I looked into the mirror on my washstand, and the face returning my scrutiny was rosy-cheeked and firm, not gaunt and fever-pale. Still, fear danced in my eyes. I hadn't been "out there" in five years. I hadn't faced Them in five years. The final words of the Mass, Father Tim spoke directly to me: "The Mass is ended. Go in peace to love and serve the Lord." "Thanks be to God," I answered along with my sisters this time, still not sure for what I was thankful, however, or what lord I would be serving in the end. I turned to leave the chapel, and Agent Scully was waiting for me right outside, a set of luggage at her feet. "Your clothes are inside," she said, pointing to the suitcases. "And here's some money for you as well," Joseph said from behind us. He handed me a purse. I opened it up and found a wallet stuffed with bills, credit cards, a drivers license with someone else's name, face and signature, in addition to several vials of my serum and a handful of syringes. Agent Scully looked over my shoulder. "Agent Mulder and I have some... some colleagues who will secure identification credentials for you as needed." "How do I find the people I am going to help?" Joseph answered me, "We will be in contact with you on a regular basis. I can also teach you some of the things you have not yet fully learned -- to help you reach the full potential of your gifts." I flinched involuntarily. A picture of *him,* my tutor from days long gone, sprang to my mind. The tutor I had murdered. I had to be careful who taught me things. "We'll see," I answered him vaguely. As we went to leave, the sisters followed us to the door to bid me farewell. Joseph opened the door for my mother and me. My mother stepped out into the eye-stinging light of the overcast November morning. I took one step over the threshold and stopped. I was leaving without saying goodbye. I turned to see the Carmelite Sisters, who had taught me so very, very much. They had taught me so much, and I... I had not killed them. I had not hurt them. They had survived me. A miracle, but not the greatest miracle they had done for me. Without even thinking, without even the slightest trace of nausea, I fell forward into their arms, which reached up reflexively to catch me. I reached for my sisters and they held me tightly -- the first time I was able to reach for human touch. Before it got too much for me, I stood up and disengaged myself from their arms, from their tearful group embrace. The nausea had started against my will. "Will you be back for Thanksgiving?" Asked Sister Helen Gabriel, dabbing at her eyes with the corner of her apron. "I might," I answered, "but I doubt it. I will be back, though." "When?" Asked the Mother Prioress. "Soon," I answered, picking up my suitcases again. I followed Joseph and Agent Scully out to the car. I took a seat in the back, and we drove for hours, silent. Images of the Cloister behind me kept springing to mind. I needed something to distract myself from what could only have been described as homesickness. I devoted my attention to the drivers license picture in my purse: Michelle Kazuko Inoue, MD. Single. Brown hair, brown eyes, five feet, four inches. Date of birth July 3, 1972. When we pulled up to the Lariat Rental lot so I could pick up a car of my own -- for this assignment, at least -- I walked up to the rental desk as Doctor Michelle K. Inoue. When I emerged from the building with keys to a shiny new rental, Agent Scully gave me one last thing -- the one last thing I was hoping she'd forget to give me. "I think you should have this back," she said, holding out to me the silver weapon I had passed on to her when I was eighteen. I shook my head in refusal, gaping at the symbol of the life, of the death I'd chosen to leave behind me years ago. //Wexford, don't think you can change.// Merchant's words. //You can never change.// The hairs on the back of my neck prickled. My mother, however,insisted, "Please, you're going to need it." My fingers fumbled indecisively with the small gold cross at my neck -- the symbol of a noble faith in which I did not share. "Then," I said, removing the necklace, "you should have this back as well." She was taken somewhat aback. "Why?" I tried to put it into words. It felt more right for me to have tools of destruction -- a magnet for destroying Their plans in one pocket, a stiletto for destroying Them in the other -- than it did for me to have a symbol of a faith not my own dangling beneath my head. How would the sisters have put it? The words of others so often worked better than any words I could imagine on my own. I paraphrased, "A woman cannot serve two masters. She must love one and despise the other, or she must deny one and serve the other." Agent Scully -- my mother -- was not happy with my words, but she agreed to the trade. Silver and gold changed hands and returned to their original owners. I gave both Joseph and my mother small smiles of farewell over the nauseous trepidation that they might want to hug me as the sisters did, even though now I held in my hands such a destructive device. They both seemed to understand. My smiles were returned. With that, I turned from them to begin this new leg of my life in a small white rental car. Thank God driving is like... riding a bike. I hadn't been behind the wheel in five years, but driving came back to me almost miraculously. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To go into great detail of my life after leaving the Cloister would not really be all that theraputic, I don't think. If you think I should, Agent Mulder, tell me and I will go back and fix it later, but it was all rather monotonous, truth be told. For over a year I ran around the country in other women's skins. I became doctors, lawyers, trusted family friends, all so I could sneak into other people's lives and unobtrusively slide my magnet against the chips in their necks. The false credit cards you and my mother passed along to me provided me with no end of seedy hotel rooms and difficult to track car rentals. For over a year They could not find me, so They could not stop me. I remained safely anonymous. I still could not call Agent Scully, "Mommy." It just did not feel right. We were comrades-at-arms, not family -- not in any normal sense. Besides, the two of you had a family of which I could never be a part. Sometimes, I have to admit, I would think of myself as Esau, the older brother whose birthright was stolen by his conniving twin Jacob, all according to God's will as written in the sisters' Bible. But as the time went by and the picture of my nine year-old sister cemented itself in my mind, I realized she and I were more like Ishmael and Isaac: the older child born under circumstances of human greed and design, in contrast to the true inheritor, born as an impossible and miraculous gift from God. Our fates were formed for us, not by us. So as much as the old heart-rending envy still rampaged within whenever I thought of my little sister, I could not hate her. Perhaps because I was learning not to hate myself. I would never be the older sibling killing the younger out of blood-boiling, rampaging jealousy. I had erased from my forehead the mark of Cain. Success. Success all my own. Or so I thought. In that year, I continued learning, albeit independently. I learned that I had opinions. It may sound ridiculous that I had a great epiphany when I discovered that I prefer Big Macs (TM) over regular cheeseburgers, but that realization and others helped me think of myself as a true individual. I was not Their Emily clone C, nor was I any of the thousand faces They had created me to make. I was, and I am Wexford. I learned so much, but not enough. I am still so angry at my refusal to keep in contact close enough for Joseph to teach me the finer points of our healing abilities. Even more so, I am angry at myself for always going to you and my mother for names of people to free. I should have found other sources. I should have covered my tracks better. Hubris, I guess it was. I guess I can never change. If only I had, I would not have put your lives in such jeapordy, and you and my mother would still have your Meg, my little sister, with you. You have been taken from your family, and it is all my fault. END 12/16 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "We know that God makes all things work together for the good of those who have been called according to his decree." --Romans 8:28 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Somehow, They found out where I was getting the names of Their subjects, and after all of the times the two of you cooperatively threw the wooden shoes into Their machine, I suppose They'd had enough. I know in the past They had orchestrated attempts on your careers and your sanity too numerous to mention, but never before had They made such a blatant strike at your very lives. At least, not that I know of. And, after all, I am relatively uninformed. I still can't figure out how long They'd been watching to corner us the way They finally did. They knew enough to wait for one of the relatively rare times when I was meeting not only with you and my mother for new connections, but I was meeting with Joseph as well; I was running low on my serum, and he was bringing me a fresh supply. These meetings had become so ordinary to me, even the danger had become customary. I guess I grew lazy, adolescently confident: nothing had happened so far. I stopped looking over my shoulder quite as much. I wasn't as hesitant to call Agent Scully on her cell phone as I had been in my early days out of the Cloister. Still, I did maintain the bare-minimum of cover; I walked into the abandoned steel mill as someone else -- a woman named Rebecca Zander. Height: five feet, nine inches. Eyes: gray. Hair: Dk. Brown. An organ donor. She had a Fashion Bug credit card, maxed. She was a Texan, from Houston, supposedly flown out to western Maryland to visit an old college roommate, one Mrs. Jennifer Witherspoon. Mrs. Jennifer Witherspoon had a chip in her neck, and Rebecca Zander had just casually destroyed that chip over lunch at an Italian restaurant. Rebecca Zander had ordered fettucine chicken Florentine; Jennifer Witherspoon noticed aloud that her old friend Rebecca no longer hated spinach as she used to in the old days. Rebecca Zander smiled back sheepishly and offered no explanation. Still as Rebecca Zander, I followed the directions to the old Lehigh Steel Mill. I remember how surprisingly heavy the traffic was, and how it was making me late, especially once that trash truck pulled out in front of me on the narrow road leading to the mill. Their trash truck? In retrospect, I can only guess so. The extent of the engineering They put into such things amazes even me, even now. At the time I was too irritated with the inconvenience even to consider such a possibility. I pulled into the parking lot and noticed not two but three cars there, and still I did not suspect a thing. It was a rare occasion that the four of us were meeting to begin with. Equally rare but not unheard of were the times you and your partner had to drive in two separate cars by necessity of your investigations. I just figured this was one of those times. I did not know anything was wrong until I trotted up the steps to the entrance, made my way through the door, and followed the low murmur of voices to an office. The door was ajar. I entered and froze in shock. You were already there. Agent Scully was already there. Joseph was already there, and I was already there. My blond hair swung in an arc as I turned to face myself, myself as Rebecca Zander. A stunned time easily comparable to eternity passed over us all -- all of us except the one who had come expressly to cause such a moment. My mother looked to me, then to her other daughter, my sister. "Emily?" she asked. Her voice came out small, dry and cold. I knew. I felt it in the pit of my stomach. They had discovered us. Even as I marveled at seeing my own face on someone else for the first time in over six years, my old training waged war on my new loyalties and sensibilities. My fingers reached into my pocket for the old weapon my tutor had given me all those years ago, but I did not bring it forth into the light. Cain and Abel. I was no longer a murderer. So I had made myself, and so I would stay. I had changed. //You can never change.// Merchant's silent words never left me completely. "Wexford." My voice came to me from my sister's mouth. She had to speak the name out loud. It was not Merchant. I pulled the weapon out but did not push the button to release its deadly point. I merely clutched at it meaningfully, as a warning. //Whatever you've got planned,// I willed her to hear me, //it's not going to work out.// Abbot or Lynch? She pulled a gun. A crude weapon, clumsy in the hands of someone who has not honed her skill for its use. Lynch had been the one trained in the use of that weapon. As she turned the gun on Joseph, I knew it was not Abbot who had come to this meeting in my place. "Lynch," I gasped. My partner from my childhood -- our childhood. The four of you were standing so close to each other, an intimate little noose of a circle. I was too far away, all the way back at the door. I could not move fast enough in my shock, so when Lynch pulled the trigger, the shot landed in Joseph's middle at point-blank range. So his blood spurted and landed on my mother and yourself, also at point-blank range. Joseph fell, clutching at his stomach. My mother and you, her partner, both fell, clawing at the raw burns digging into your faces. Joseph's breath coughed out of him. Both of you struggled to breathe at all. I remember feeling my own throat close up as well. Some sympathetic response, or just the automatic effect of panic? Joseph's blue, blue eyes searched mine, pleading for help. I remembered a night when a knife slid down my cheek, and I was able to close the wound. Would that be enough to heal? I gave myself no choice but to try. I would have to touch them. They had no other help but me. I moved quickly, but a hand clamped on my arm and stopped me. "Wexford," Lynch said, fixing her eyes -- *my eyes* on Rebecca Zander's dark ones. "Come back with me..." My old friend nausea hit me like a tidal wave. I wrested my arm from my sister's grip. I hissed old ords at her, warning her of the blood- boiling, rampaging fury filling my gut. "If you ever touch me again, I will kill you." I did not wait to see what effect my warning had. I rushed blindly to the three who had been sprawled on the dusty floor with one gunshot from Lynch. What I saw there was... horrible. All of you were unconscious by then, because I had not moved fast enough. Joseph's blood had splattered your skins with acidic burns. I summoned every ounce of courage it would take to touch, and placed all that courage first into the wound in Joseph's stomach, thinking that if my poor efforts would be enough to revive him, he could do the rest for yourself and my mother. I imagined the wound gone. I imagined it closing up. I imagined the green blood running its plotted course through Joseph's veins. He blinked. It was working. His skin closed over where once a brief gaping hole had been. He groaned loudly. He was in pain. "Joseph?" I called. His eyes rolled back until all I could see was the white. Seconds were vital. He had to heal. //Had// to. I could not do this myself. I hadn't accepted enough training. "Joseph!" I shrieked, "come on, you have to get better. You have to help me!" His head lolled on his neck and his eyes closed once more. I felt desperately for a pulse, and found only a weak one. I imagined for him a strong heart beating fiercely, but imagination was not enough. Joseph took in a deep breath, but when he coughed in exhalation, his lips were spattered with more flecks of green. I did not know anything at all about the inner workings of our bodies. I could not imagine new parts for Joseph. I could not imagine his pain away. Keeping one hand on Joseph's stomach, I nevertheless reached over to my mother willing her breathing to return to normal, not the weak wheeze that had come over her at the touch of Joseph's blood. Her breathing became less hindered, and I crawled over to you to do the same. The same resulted, but none of you was conscious yet. I was making no headway. I looked up. I had not noticed until then that Lynch had gone. Where, I don't know. Why, I can't even begin to guess. I looked back at the three of you. I could not figure out what to do. When I was eleven I had called 911, but the results had been tragic. I am, after all, Biohazard. The sisters of the Cloister would have called on their God in such a situation. But I was no longer a sister of the Cloister. I was, I am Wexford. My identity, however, could not stop some primeval mental twitch from tweaking my brain. Was it a prayer, or simply my staring down the face of despair? I don't know, and I still have not found the courage to ask. Whatever it was, some indefinable time later, I heard a thunder of multiple footsteps tramping up to the office where I now struggled with unschooled t0ouch to keep my three patrons alive. When the footsteps grew closer, then stilled themselves over the threshold to the office, I looked up and saw several silhouettes -- human shapes, but the uncovered presence of Joseph's spilled blood had no effect on them. "There he is," said one, "oh my God." "Take them all to the vans," commanded another. "Hurry!" I could not see their faces at all in the dim dusty air. I was lifted off the floor by purposeful hands. "No!" I shouted, wrestling, "Don't touch me!" But their strength equalled if not surpassed my own. I could not resist. "You may find this hard to believe," answered my captor, "but we're here to rescue you." Just then, I heard someone cough. I think it was you, and Agent Scully's own coughing was not far behind. I turned my head to see both of you breathing -- not well, but on your own -- and being dragged to your feet by some of the others who had just rushed into the office with my own captor. "Fauchelevent?" my captor called over the din. "Here," he hissed. "Thanks, Scott." "Joseph!" I shouted in relief. "It's okay, Emily," he called back, but weakly. Still distrusting, I did not go easily down the stairs as Scott my captor dragged me. "Where are we going?" I demanded of him. I received no answer, except being propelled outside the building and into a large van. "What is happening?" I shouted to him as he took the driver's seat and roundly ignored me. Shortly thereafter, another man was helping Joseph into the seat beside me. Then we were driven off. I turned to look out the back window just in time to see you and Agent Scully being helped into another van. The man riding shotgun who had just helped Joseph leaned out the opend window and shouted to the people loading the van behind us, "GO! GOGOGO!" Tires squealed. Dust flew. I turned again and saw the other van pulling close behind us. "GET DOWN!" Scott the driver shouted to all of us. Joseph reached out and grasped my hand to pull me down. Before I could pull back a great noise shook the air around us and forced my face to the seat. When I looked up again, the building from which we had just been dragged was alive with flames and billowing with choking gray smoke. I stopped asking questions just then, for the time being. In numb silence, I watched the landscapes roll by. We were heading north. The gentle hills kept getting taller. We passed over the Pennsylvania border by way of a non-toll bridge. These people knew where they were going, where they were taking me and Joseph, you and my mother. Hours later, I realized I knew where they were taking us as well. White lettering on the green sign read, "WEXFORD, 5 MILES." END 13/16 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "In hope we were saved. But hope is not hope if its object is seen; how is it possible for one to hope for what he sees? And hoping for what we cannot see means awaiting it with patient endurance." --Romans 8: 24-25 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In hope we were saved, but hope requires risk. Hope demands sacrifice. Dusk had come by the time we reached the mouth of the Cloister's long driveway. I was ignored again in the flurry that ensued with our arrival. Well, almost ignored. "Stay here, Wexford," Scott snapped as he leapt out of the van and ran up the steps to the Cloister house. I rediscovered my voice. "How do you know who I am?" But Scott was already gone. The man in the passenger seat answered me instead with more questions. "How do we know who you are? Fauchelevent, didn't you tell her anything?" Joseph smiled weakly. "She didn't ask, Lenhart." The man Joseph had just called Lenhart turned to face me with a wolfish but friendly smile. "We're your family, Wexford." Thick black eyebrows danced at me over dark eyes. "Family?" I echoed, giving Joseph an uncertain glance. "You're one of us," Lenhart explained, "The Resistance." "Joseph?" I was asking for confirmation. He nodded and closed his eyes, as if very, very tired. "Is that how you found us?" I asked Lenhart. Lenhart shrugged and looked casually at his fingernails. "We knew where Fauchelevent was going today, and then we got information that They were on to us. Simple, really, once you see how we work things." Simple. I almost laughed. I actually felt the giggle bubbling up in my throat. So it hadn't been that mental twitch of mine that had summoned these people to drag us away in their vans. "Who? Who gave you that information?" Lenhart simply stared at me. Perhaps some questions are best left unanswered. "What happened to that steel mill?" I asked nevertheless, looking out the window so as to leave the question open for either Joseph -- Fauchlevent -- or Lehnart. Beside me, Joseph gave a shuddering breath. Lenhart answered with words, however. "They went for overkill this time. Just sending Lynch wasn't enough. They think you're all dead now, or beyond saving." The way he said "They" was clearly upper-case. "So," Lenhart waxed loquacious, "we decided to give Them what They wanted and to make the best of it. We play along like the three of you are dead, see?" "What do you mean, 'we'?" I demanded, turning to face Lenhart. "Who gives you the right to decide that for us?" I pinned him with my gaze, with the icy gray eyes of Rebecca Zander. He fidgeted uncomfortably. "We *haven't* decided that," Joseph whispered. Then he insisted, "You have a choice." Those same words, but this time I knew the choice was not just mine. My mother and her partner would have to make a choice as well. Hope demands sacrifice. Sighing with irritation -- irritation was not nearly as painful as raw fear -- I asked one more question. "Well, what are we doing here, then?" Jerking a thumb towards the van parked behind ours, Lenhart answered. "We need their help." He used a lower-case "their." He meant you and my mother, but you know that. "For what?" I forced some snappiness into my voice -- Rebecca Zander's voice. In a weak murmur, Joseph replied, "We need a vaccine, and we're running out of time." "But why did we have to come *here*?" "We're not staying here," Lenhart grumbled. Silent minutes later, I saw familiar faces in familiar habits scrambling down the front steps of the Cloister. They were all carrying boxes brimming with what I can only describe as... stuff. Clothes, food, apple butter, vials and hypodermic syringes. Stuff. Lenhart jumped out of the van and opened the back door. Sister Helen Gabriel was the first one in, followed by three of the other five. Mother Prioress and Sister Mary Therese were climbing into the van behind ours. "Sister!" Helen Gabriel smiled, handing me the box she had been carrying. "Are you ready for an adventure?" I opened my mouth to speak, but the irony of the words I was about to say hit me. Hit me hard, actually. That tiny giggle that had stirred inside of me a few minutes ago gained momentum. I began to snicker. Then, I was not just giggling, but laughing. Laughing out loud, deep, body-shaking belly-laughs. Was I ready for an adventure? "Do I have a choice?" I asked Sister Helen Gabriel, as tears of laughter streamed down my cheeks and Scott put the car in gear, heading us off onto a night-dark highway. I just barely heard Joseph's shallow- breathing laughter over the growl of the engine. Not only did I make a joke, but somebody else got it. Success. Success all my own. I hadn't even noticed that in my laughter I had reverted to the face I had originally called my own, that of Emily Camille Wexford. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I can only describe that whole night as surreal. Morning brought us further upstate. No green highway sign gave us warning of our destination, but I knew we were still heading north. Faint gray light shone in the passenger side windows and fell upon the silhouette of a farm sprawling at the top of a long uphill driveway. I squinted and saw a light shining in one window. Someone had waited up for us. "There it is," Lenhart yawned. Scott turned the wheel and we were bumping our way up the pothole-pocked drive. "Like I said when we bought it," Lenhart grumbled through grittted teeth, "the place needs some major work." "Small town," Scott said. I could see his knuckles whitening at his grip on the steering wheel, even in the dark. "Backward. No surveilance cameras in any of the stores or gas stations. It's the safest place around. You know that just as well as I do. Besides, the sisters' liked the name." A wave of light laughter issued from the other passengers. "And," Scott added, "it's got those underground passages. The best deal we could've found. Thank God for Erie's lake-affect snow." "We should've had more time to fix it up before bringing them here," Lenhart complained to no one in particular. Scott frowned. "No point arguing it now. They forced our hand." Joseph sat up next to me. His gunshot wound was gone, and other than looking exhausted, he appeared none the worse for wear. He turned and gave me what was meant to be a reassuring smile. "What is this place?" I asked him, knowing he would have an answer. "It's a farm we bought as a base of operations and research," he explained, "in a little town called Mount Carmel." Then I understood the sisters' appreciation, being from the Discalced religious order of Our Lady of Mount Carmel. Scott pulled us up to the driveway and the sisters filed out, carrying their boxes. Lenhart took Sister Helen Gabriel's box, since she was the oldest, even older than Mother Prioress. Then, Joseph crawled out of the van, and I followed him. An early morning breeze lightened the May heat and humidity. I looked around, and apparently everyone else was doing the same. There was an ancient, paint-peeling hex sign over the barn doors, typical of old Pennsylvania Dutch farms. The doors of the other van suddenly slammed shut. A woman a few years older than me was leading my mother and her partner up the front steps of the farm house. I remember it clearly -- so clearly, I don't think even my unreliable memory could ever lose that image. The two of you were clinging to each other, walking so slowly, as if each step hurt. I wanted to stop you, to ask what was wrong. Were you still just in pain from Joseph's blood? I thought our abductors had healed you. They had, hadn't they? I wanted to call out to my mother, but I did not know how to address her. The word "Mommy" was not for me to say, and now that I know why your posture spoke of such despair, I am doubly glad I did not say that word; I am sure I only would have twisted the nails in the fresh wound of the sacrifice you had decided to make. "Sister," a familiar voice called softly on the morning haze. I turned and saw Mother Prioress, her brows knit together in the same expression of worry I'd so often seen and caused. She was carrying a box, and either through nature or old habit, I reached out to carry it for her. She surrendered it gracefully. She must have noticed how I was watching the two of you, because she offered me the explanation I could not demand out loud. "They've made a choice," she sighed, her voice tired but heavy with compassion. I stopped walking, afraid of what Mother Prioress would say next, but still I had to ask. "And?" The Mother Prioress waved her hand, inviting me to keep walking up the steps with her. "Do you remember the gospel of John, chapter fifteen, verse thirteen?" I could actually feel myself blush. I was no longer under her care, but I did not want to disappoint the Mother Prioress. "I have not kept up with my scripture reading," I admitted. She did not respond with any condemnatory words. She only nodded in acknowlegement. "It's from Our Lord's Last Supper, Sister. Now do you recall?" Surreal. This whole experience was so surreal. I tugged on my brain to determine Mother Prioress' reference. The Last Supper discourse: Jesus' parting words. Parting words. He was about to be taken away from his friends and family. Parting words. I ventured a guess. "'Man hath no greater love than this...'?" "... than to lay down one's life for one's friends." The Mother Prioress nodded and finished for me. I looked up the steps just in time to watch you and my mother enter the house, our new home. "They made a choice?" I asked the Mother Prioress. "Sister," she nodded and said in a voice more bitter than sweet, "I would like you to attend a funeral." Hope demands sacrifice. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ It was more of a memorial service, actually. The bodies had not been found, so a Mass of Christian Burial was not an option, and would have been inappropriate, given that only one of you was Catholic. I pulled out an old identity, one I had not used in months. An older woman named Joanne Forte, birthdate 3/4/54. Never married. Brown eyes. She was my height: five feet, three inches. A minimum of effort went into becoming her, and I knew I was going to need all the energy I could spare. I decided to drive instead of taking a flight out there. It was an nine hour haul from northwestern Pennsylvania back out to the suburbs of DC. Plenty of time to think. Plenty of time to prepare myself for seeing my little sister again. But nothing could have prepared me for all I was about to encounter. According to the media, there had been a bombing of an abandoned steel mill in western Maryland. No suspects had been named, but two federal agents had been presumed dead. No one knew why they were there in the first place, not even their superior agents, but their rental car had been found at the scene of the bombing, and the agents themselves were nowhere to be found. The investigation team was looking into various leads, the most promising of which pointed to any one of thousands of local laid-off steel mill workers and their families. I would have laughed when I read that, but I had other things on my mind. I was still trying to find the obituaries. Once I found them, I found where the memorial service would be held, and when. My little sister was much taller than I had expected her to be. In my mind, Margaret Grace Mulder was still nine years old, playing basketball in her driveway, utterly innocent to the fact that her older sister was being trained up to kill her, much less that she even *had* an older sister, or five... It took me several minutes to figure out it was her. She was standing at the head of a relatively short line. Her hair was pulled back into a French twist, which kept loosening as time went by. An older woman stood next to my little sister, holding Meg's hand and softly talking to her. Actually, it was more like my sister was holding *her* hand, offering the elder mourner strength. My grandmother. Since I was sixteen, I'd been aware that I had a little sister, outside of those who had been created just like me. But the realization that I had a grandmother as well was... eerie. I had a grandmother, and uncles, and cousins. My little sister, born, coddled raised in love, the darling girl among a passle of grandsons, had just lost her family. I, created, brought forth, engineered... had just found more family than I had ever imagined reading about in any of my books. I did not pass through the receiving line at first. I just watched from the back of the crowd, but that still did not put me at much of a distance from where my sister and my grandmother were shaking the hands and accepting the hugs and sympathies of their few fellow mourners. It seemed to be mostly family -- my family -- and a very few friends in attendance. Family. My family. I kept my distance and Joanne Forte's face. A tall young man, African-American, gently forced his way to the front of the receiving line and bent to hug my grandmother. Then, he said something to my sister, something I could not hear, and he placed his dark hand softly against my sister's ash-pale cheek. For the first time since I had seen her, she actually looked like she was about to cry. She did not, however. She just nodded and smiled. Who was he? He must have been important to her if he could almost make her lose her composure like that. I decided to get a closer look at my sister's face. I don't know why. Curiosity, I suppose. I looked around carefully to see if anyone had noticed me. They -- upper-case -- would surely be watching this event. No one seemed to be paying particular attention to my -- Joanne Forte's -- presence. I joined the line, keeping my eyes fixed on my sister so I could continue wondering what kind of person she was. With each hand she shook, her face cemented more deeply into a non-expression. Her eyes were completely dry as I watched her, but the gray shadows coloring her eyelids spoke of hours of crying alone, perhaps into a pillow. When her hands weren't busy with the business of being part of a receiving line, they were brushing back the wayward curls that kept escaping from the twist at the back of her head. The the tilt of her cheeks, the angle of her chin -- so much of it was like looking into a mirror. She was eighteen now. Eighteen. *All grown up,* as my mother had said. *Our* mother. She looked so vulnerable, but so strong. You would have been proud of her had you been there. I'd forgotten to bring flowers. To my own mother's funeral. Yet another thing that no one had ever thought to train into me. I had nothing to give my sister or my grandmother. Nothing. I could not even touch them for comfort. Or couldn't I? Hope demands sacrifice. I shook my grandmother's hand. Success. Success all my own. She smiled, and it was my mother's smile. "Thank you for coming," she said. Her voice was tired with weeping. Then I was standing before my little sister. I had to look up to see her eyes. Her eyes had the same shape as the eyes They had given me, but hers were colored with flecks of green. She did not smile at me. She gave no greeting. "How did you know them?" She asked me. I hadn't prepared an answer to that question. I thought quickly for something that was the truth -- maybe not all of it, but enough of it. "We were comrades-at-arms," I explained in Joanne Forte's sixty-something voice. Something in my sister's face twitched at that strange phrase I chose, but she did not press. I could sense she was too busy trying to control her own grief. She did not reach for my hand. She did not say "thank you." In fact, she stepped back from me. I made the greatest sacrifice I could think of making at the time; I reached out to another human being, my little sister. I took her hand in mine, and imagined healing for her passing from my hand into hers, from my green blood into her red blood, from my heart into hers. I did not know if my imaginings would make a difference. I just held her and let myself hope that my touch could actually give her some measure of peace. Suddenly, tears sprang to her eyes unbidden. She almost ripped her hand out of mine. "I am so sorry," I said, because, after all, it is all my fault. Then I turned and left. I did not stay for the service. On the drive back to Mount Carmel, I thought about how I almost made my little sister cry. I had only wanted to heal her. It seemed I couldn't do anything right, not even the sorts of things They had created me to do. Unless tears are a form of healing, too. I stopped on the way home to get gas for the car. When I went to pay, I picked up a newspaper. "SUSPECT CHARGED IN STEEL MILL BOMBING FOUND DEAD IN CELL." I read on. "Son of a former mill employee, Mr. Joseph Fauchlevent, age 28, who reportedly confessed to setting the bomb at the abandoned Lehigh Steel Mill last week, was found dead in his cell shortly before three AM. Cause of death is still undetermined...." So much death devouring everything. I dropped the paper in the parking lot. Hope demands sacrifice. Tears are a form of healing. One week ago, after I left your funeral, I arrived back here at this farm in Mount Carmel, Pennsylvania -- this farm the sisters are already calling "the new Cloister." I spent this past week after my return alone in my room, coming out only for food and refills on serum. I finally have decided to make amends for my guilt, to put right all that I have put wrong, and that is why I came to you today, Agent Mulder, to ask for your help. Well, yesterday, at this point. I need to put this all behind me and become a new person if I am ever going to learn to heal. If I am ever going to uncover the full potential that is me, I need to learn these things. I will. I must. It is a difficult thing for me to learn, but hope demands sacrifice. This is the least I can do, in light of what you and my mother and Joseph have given up. So you told me to write it down, since I so obviously could not talk about it. So here it is. After writing all through the night, my hand hurts, I am more tired than I ever have been, and the sun is just starting to rise, but here it is. It was hard work but I know it nothing compared to what is to come. There is no spell to make me just like everyone else. There is only this sacrifice. It is a start. END 14/16 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ You did not receive a spirit of slavery, leading you back into fear, but a spirit of adoption through which we cry out "Abba!" (that is, "Father") --Romans 8: 15 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Two years. I can't belive it. Almost two years have passed since I have written in this notebook. Two years, and I have learned so much, but it still was not enough. So much has happened in just the past thirty-six hours, and even though I did all I could, I should have been able to do more. I am so sorry, but sorry is not enough. Sorry cannot bring your daughter out of her unconsciousness -- a state I could have prevented had I learned enough. For nearly two years I have designated myself my sister's keeper; I have kept tabs on her through other members of the Resistance: namely, Scott, Lenhart and Keyte. The three of them watched over her and let us know that Meg Mulder was succeeding in the Foreign Languages program at Georgetown, despite being the youngest junior on campus. She was easy to keep an eye on, Lenhart quipped, because she was always studying. She hardly ever went out, but when she did it was either to go home and visit her grandmother or to take the Metro to Catholic University and have pizza and watch movies with her friend Kevin -- the tall boy who had touched her cheek at your funeral. The tall boy I could not save last night. A year ago, another death touched my little sister's life. Was this death engineered by Them? We can only guess. I attended the funeral for our grandmother, Doctor Scully's mother. At that funeral I did not approach my sister Meg at all. I had too much to hide this time. I wanted to tell her too much. It was all I could do to maintain our deep cover for her protection. Had I let myself get too close to her, I would have spilled it all, and I know that is not what you, her parents, wanted for her. For two years I have tried to learn the depths of my healing capabilities, but my earlier learning has left walls within me. The skill to murder left little room for my desire to heal, but I have made some headway. I memorized what Scott, Lenhart and Keyte taught me about removing the black oil. That alone took two years, and now I'm wondering if it was even worth the effort. Lenhart said that was the first thing I should learn, but after last night I have to wonder. Last night. Well, starting with two days ago, really, when Scott, Lenhart and Keyte returned to the new Cloister with information. "Wexford," Keyte called to me across our Cloister basement lab as she pulled her mouse brown hair into a ponytail. Last name is customary form of address in this world of ours; so many of us, clones, share first names with others who are not part of our resistant, rebellious efforts. Where last names tie humans together in families, they offer us one of the few indicators of our individualities. I left the tools I was sterilizing and walked out to her. Her face had an expression of cocky annoyance, which meant she was worried. "What is it?" "The boys and I just got back from a serum run," she said, "the boys" meaning Scott and Lenhart, "and along the way we got word that They have been watching your sister for the past couple days." The way she said "They" was clearly upper-case. *How* They were watching her, I didn't even need to ask. They had enough vehicles of surveilance at Their disposal, even I knew that, and Keyte never lied. Never. Not even white lies. I looked over at Doctor Scully, wearing the white lab coat I had bought for her last Christmas. She had not heard our conversation. She was hard at work directing the sisters in mass-production of our vaccine formula. At least one success has come out of our exile so far. "Which one?" I asked Keyte in a hushed voice, hoping Doctor Scully wouldn't hear and worry. "Your little sister," she explained, lowering her own voice. I shook my head. "Why? Why now?" All she did was shrug. "You haven't been out there with us in months. Has there been a break in security around here?" "Not that I can think of. I mean, except going out to get groceries at that store without a surveilance camera, nobody's come or gone besides the three of you," I answered my fellow soldier. Keyte's face went pale at the implications. "Scott and Lenhart -- they're not traitor material." "I didn't say they were. Anyway, it doesn't matter. What are you going to do about it?" Keyte snickered at me. "What do you mean 'you'? More like what are *we* going to do about it?" So whatever they wanted to do, they wanted me to be a part of it. "You're still the best morpher," Keyte continued, "and if we need to be out there keeping a physical eye on her, you're the best woman for the job." So I went with them. How did I find your daughter the next day? So much of my life has been spent as other people. I may not have learned all there is to know about healing, but I know how to be other people. All I had to do was think: if I were Meg Mulder, darling girl raised in love but suddenly on my own as the result of multiple tragedies... where would I have gone? When we got in the van, Scott looked to me for direction. I am the youngest, but my brothers and sisters in the Resistance still treat me like an equal -- an honor I often feel I do not deserve. Nevertheless, when Lenhart asked me, "Where to, Wexford?" I had no trouble offering a suggestion. "Back to D. C." Hours later, I had them drop me off at the graveyard. They drove around separately, looking to protect your little girl. I waited by your empty graves. I didn't even change my face. I found a hiding spot among a small stand of trees. The unexpected threat is the greatest threat of all. When I saw Lynch arrive with Kevin Declan, I was wearing the face They had given to me and my sisters, Emily A through Emily E. In my hiding place, I was Wexford. As Wexford, I watched my little sister place small, plastic-wrapped bouquets before four gravestones. As Wexford, I watched Lynch lead Kevin Declan out of her car, the car They had given her, and I watched her aim her gun through night's darkness at our little sister -- at my little sister. "Emily," I whispered from my shadows. Lynch, my sister, lowered her gun and turned to me. She was obviously shocked to see me, to see herself there, calling her by name. I stepped closer to Lynch. I could hear our little sister yelling something to her driver as Kevin, infected with the oil, pursued her. "Emily," I pleaded, "come back with me." Almost two years ago she had said the same words to me. She raised her gun again, but kept looking at me, her face pained. For those times They had sent Lynch after me, I had to try to lure her away from Them. She was my sister, and I am my sisters' keeper. Our fates had been chosen for us, not by us. How had Joseph lured me away? It still hurts to remember him, but I needed his memory to guide me in how to reach for my sister, Emily Elizabeth Lynch. "Emily," I told her, "you have a choice." When the blue light of night fell on her eyes, eyes exactly like my own, I saw what she was feeling: blood-boiling, heart-rending, rampaging jealousy. Nothing more. There was no hope there, not even desire. And so I knew what her choice would be. I tried to stop her the only way old habits told me I could. As fast as Lynch re-aimed her gun at our little sister, I rushed her, pulled the gimlet out and drove it into her neck. At the time it was the only way I could think of to stop her. I killed her. I killed Lynch. I killed my partner from long ago. I killed my sister, just as Cain had killed Abel. But I was still too late. Lynch fell to the ground, and the devouring began just as Meg Mulder fell with a gunshot wound in her left shoulder. "What have you done?" God asked Cain. "Listen; your brother's blood cries out to me from the soil!" If I think too hard, I can still hear Lynch's scream just before she was no more. Was the choice hers to make, or had I taken that choice from her? I just can't figure it out. I saw that Lynch's erstwhile captive had turned to watch what was happening through oil-clouded eyes. I had no time then to ponder over what I had done. I ran over to Meg's friend and called upon what Scott and Lenhart and Keyte had made me memorize about removing the black oil. I knew it in theory, but had never tested it in practice. *That's the first thing you oughta learn,* had been Lenhart's admonition. I had wanted them to teach me how to heal first, but they had insisted. *There'll be time to teach you the rest,* Keyte had assured me, but I could tell she was trying to assure herself as well. I called upon my utterly unreliable memory, and to my utter shock it worked. The gruesome black stuff came pouring out at my command, but it only bought time for Kevin Declan. I could not help him and heal Meg at the same time, and my little sister was sprawled in the grass, unmoving. Death behind me, death beside me, and death before me. I ran to Meg, knelt by her side. If she dies too, then what good have I done? I put my palm on her back and tried to imagine her wound closed. I knew it wouldn't work, but I had to try. Why hadn't I made Keyte come with me to that graveyard? Hubris, I guess. See? I told you I could have done more. Meg struggled. I told her not to fight it. I heard myself calling her my little sister. She must have known what I was, because she tried to get away from me, even with a bullet in her back. Even with death upon her she fought. Thinking about that now, I think I can say that I admire my little sister. At the moment, though, all I could think about was this: that I had to prove to her that I'm not like Them, that I am not one of Them, that I have chosen a different path. I *have* chosen a different path. My God. Everything has changed. When Meg's wound closed enough that she was no longer losing as much blood, we had to move her. We had no time. We still have to go back and get her friend later. I told her driver to get your daughter out of there. He helped me lift her into the car. I guess he only obeyed my command out of fear, because he had just witnessed what I had done to someone who looked exactly like me. A strange sort of suicide. "I'll ride with you until you can get her to a hospital," I told him, "but then you're on your own." He sort of waggled his head as if trying to shake himself out of a trance. That was when he asked that question. "Do you know where her parents are?" I was too stunned to answer. "I have a plane," he continued, in the obvious hope that he could persuade me to tell him where the missing parents were. I could not heal her wound totally, but I made a choice: a choice to trust that stranger and reunite my sister with her family. And your partner is a doctor. I acted in the very human hope that Mommy would make it all better. So Cho, the pilot, flew us here. I kept my palm on my little sister's shoulder the whole time, doing what little I could to keep her breathing even and to keep her blood from leaving her completely. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Now, after our mother has sewn Meg up properly, using some of the medical supplies we have hoarded against the colonization days to come, the two of you sit with her, reunited at last with your miracle daughter, the child of your love. She is still unconscious, and there is still much she does not know, but my choice, my risk has brought hope. Hope for the three of you. Perhaps I have it in me to heal after all. And perhaps being human is not about being pure good. Perhaps it is just about reaching out to others in hopes of making a difference. It's about choice. It's about sacrifice and touch. It's about always changing and learning. It's about having faith in others. It's about having faith in myself. You didn't have to thank me, you know. I am my sister's keeper. I should have been able to do more. It is morning again, and I have just reread what I have written here. I just looked in the mirror and nothing has changed, but as I read my own story, everything has changed. I think I need to find the Mother Prioress. And Father Tim. There is something I want to do now. I have sins to be forgiven, because I have murdered. When I chose to take away those lives, I took away that precarious gift called choice. And we all deserve a choice, red blood or green blood. We are all, at least partially, human. But I have also done good, and I have to acknowledge that. Within me I have life and death, blessing and curse, like all the human race. I have an identity to claim, and a family to call my own. Perhaps Doctor Scully can be persuaded to leave one daughter's bedside and help me just a little for just a few minutes. I am going to need a godmother. I will ask the Mother Prioress to give me a name. Now I am called Wexford, but I have changed. I know this now. END 15/16 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "But if we are children, we are heirs as well: heirs of God, heirs with Christ, if only we suffer with him so as to be glorified with him." --Romans 8: 17 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I don't have much time. I'm writing this quickly, as my little sister writes a note of her own, explaining where we are going. Meg thinks quickly, and doesn't give a second thought to risking her own life to save another, even while she is in such great pain now. Now, I am certain that I admire her. She is so much that I am not, so much that I can never be. While she still slept, I was baptized. Mother Prioress gave me names for my new identity. She whispered the names to Father, who poured the water over my head. "I baptize you, Michael Joan, in the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit." As I was named, I looked to Mother Prioress, who smiled at me with tears in her eyes. Michael for the Archangel, defender of souls, warrior against evil. And Joan for Joan of Arc. The Mother Prioress had chosen strong patrons for me. Then, Father Tim touched me with the sacramental oil, saying the words of anointing, "Go forth and live as Jesus has called you, as prophet, priest and king." "Wait," Doctor Scully said, just as Father Tim was about to say the closing prayer. "Doesn't she have to put on a white garment?" Mother Prioress nodded, "That is traditonally part of the sacrament." Then, my godmother helped me into the white lab coat I had given her last Christmas. White -- the symbolic color of healing, hope, and new life. My christening gown. "Thanks," I whispered. Then, I pitched my voice low enough that she might not have heard it. "Mommy..." She must have heard it. She rested her hand against my cheek. At last, I did not need to pull away. Hours later, when Meg finally woke up, Doctor Scully called on me to explain to my sister what had happened in the graveyard. I described it as best I could, but there is still much she does not know. She is almost twenty one. Don't you think she is old enough now? But I suppose that is not my choice. When she sent both you and her mother away, Agent Mulder, she asked me to help her go back and find Kevin. I am helping her because it's my fault he's not here with us now in the first place. I am only human, but I still must do all I can to right my wrongs. So I will do all I can to make a deal. I will call on that house where I once was tutored, the house where my sisters still live. I will arrange a deal with Them. Just in case, I will bring the stiletto They gave me, but I hope not to use it. I know the danger in facing my remaining two sisters. I am not naive. But what is the worst They can do, kill me? I am more than what They created me to be. If They kill me, They destroy only the shell, and the shell was all They ever wanted anyway. I am taking some vaccine with me to cure Kevin for certain. I already have some of my own syringes. I gave Meg freedom to go through my clothes for something to wear on this journey of ours. My little sister is borrowing my clothes. How normal. Soon I will close this book and go to help her get dressed. She is still weak and in much pain. She needs my help. Miracle of miracles, I can hold her and there is no nausea. I do not have much more time to write, but I wanted to leave my own note. If I do not come back from this journey, I want my little sister to read this notebook I've kept for the purpose of healing. This might help her understand some of the things she has not yet learned about what is out there, about Their Project, and about what has been hidden from her and why. Perhaps she can see what kinds of sacrifices have been made out of hope for her future. Perhaps this will help her understand how much she is loved and needed. Then again, perhaps I will return to this farm, our new Cloister, to my family in all its shapes and forms. In fact, I am pulling off our poorly stocked library shelves two books I have always refused to read up until now. Their titles were too damning for me, I used to think, their premises too much wishful thinking. I don't think that anymore. Everything has changed. "The Story of a Soul," by Therese of Lisieux, a Carmelite nun. "Little Women," by Louisa May Alcott. I think I will be ready to read them when I come home. Perhaps I will read them to my sister one day. My little sister. My family. END 16/16 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Well, you hated it? You liked it? You don't know what happens to Wexford? Email me at CathyLex@aol.com ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Visit The Basement Office:http://members.xoom.com/galias/erin.htm "I just want to be taken away to some place where I don't have to worry about finding a job."