From: jennyann@ix.netcom.com(Jennifer Lyon)
Newsgroups: alt.tv.x-files.creative
Subject: NEW: "Convergence" XF/M1 xover Part II-A
Date: 11 Mar 1996 05:09:05 GMT


Convergence
Part Two of an X-Files/ Murder One Cross-Over
By Jennifer Lyon
Jennyann@ix.netcom.com, Jenni10647@AOL.com

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Disclaimer: Fox Mulder and The X-Files are the property of 
FOX, Neil Avedon and Murder One are the property of ABC. As 
in most fanfiction, I am taking some liberties with the characters, 
no offense is meant - I'm just having some fun! Mostly I'm just 
ditzing around with my two favorite TV characters. This is a 
direct sequel to "One Day At A Time" and picks up less than an 
hour after the end of the first story. 
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Part II - A

	Driving up the steep, hillside road with only the tail-
lights of Neil's car for a guide, Mulder kept one hand gripped 
tightly on the steering wheel. Reaching into his coat pocket with 
the other hand, he drew out his cell phone and lifted it to his ear, 
then punched the top speed-dial button without bothering to turn 
his eyes. The button itself was worn with the travail of long and 
familiar use, and the beeps rang in his ear in a comforting pattern.
	Her voice was sleepy when it answered, and he could 
envision her face in his mind - the tangle of rich auburn hair 
surrounding a pair of sapphire-like eyes; the mouth wide and full-
lipped above a slightly pointed chin. 
	"Scully, it's me," he announced.
	"Mulder..." He could hear the smile in her voice as she 
spoke. "Having trouble sleeping?"
	"Actually, I haven't tried yet. It's been a rather busy 
night, but look - could you do something for me?"
	"Mmmm, give me a moment." The sound of motion 
echoed in his ear, skin sliding across sheets followed by the click 
of a lamp switch, and then her voice coalesced into awareness.
	"OK - sure, what's going on?"
	"I just want you to check on something, put out a few 
feelers and see what bites."
	"Alright - does this have to be tonight?" 
	He laughed. "No, tomorrow is fine. I'm interested in a 
case called "The Goldilocks Murder" - a man named Neil Avedon 
is on trial here in Los Angeles."
	"Yes, I've heard about it. The victim was a fifteen year-
old girl, and they charged a movie-star with her murder. In fact I 
saw his latest film just last night - Deadbolt."
	"Yeah, that's the one." He paused, then threw out the 
words defiantly. "He didn't do it, Scully. He didn't kill her."
	"What? Mulder..." Scully felt a familiar exasperation 
creep into her voice, but the utter certainty in his tone made her 
pause. Thoughtfully, she asked, "I'm not an expert on the case, 
but what I have heard makes it look pretty open-and-shut. And 
you know the police, even the *LA* police, don't often make 
those kinds of mistakes."
	"I know. And under other circumstances, I'd agree with 
you."
	"But..." she prompted.
	"But that was before I met Neil Avedon. He's not a 
killer, Scully. He's certainly got his share of troubles, but he didn't

do this. I've seen his reaction to violence - he was horrified - that 
reaction wasn't faked, I'm sure of it."
	"His reaction to what? Mulder, what on earth is going 
on?"
	"Look, it's a long story and it's late. Just do me a favor 
and see what you can find out, especially about the first man they 
arrested for the murder, ummm, Richard Cross. C-R-O-S-S. 
Richard. I'll fill you in on the rest of it later."
	"Mulder..." She sighed with resignation, causing him to 
smile into the phone.
	"Sleep well, Scully." He hit the end button and returned 
the phone to his pocket. Putting his hand back on the steering 
wheel, he drove into a long, tree-lined driveway.
				- - - - -

	The house sprawled out on one level, resting in the 
hillside at an angle, allowing the left side to lift slightly off the 
ground. The walls were white stucco with yellow trim framing 
huge windows. Bushy shrubs lined the front walls, opening in the 
middle for a set of marble stairs that led up to a metallic gold-
painted door. Neil punched in the alarm code, then swung the 
door open to let them both inside.
	The front hallway gave way into a wide, high-ceilinged 
room centered on a big, old-fashioned fireplace. The colors were 
light, soft shades of cream, brown and green giving it an airy 
look. A chocolate-colored leather couch faced a big screen TV 
built into the wall, surrounded by shelves filled primarily with 
video tapes, spotted here and there with a few paperback books. 
Staring at it as though for the first time, Neil had to appreciate 
the designer's skill, though he suddenly felt the lack of his own 
touch in the room.
	Mulder stepped up behind him, his eyes appreciative. 
"Nice," he commented.
	Neil smiled wryly, "It ought to be considering what I 
paid for it."
	"Ahh, a designer original?"
	Neil chuckled. "Yes, decorating was never my strong 
point. Sometimes, I get the strongest urge to start throwing stuff 
around, just to mark the place as mine."
	"You should see my apartment," Mulder replied wryly. 
"It tends to be a permanent disaster. Scully says it reminds her of 
a cavern - small and dark and dusty. I don't have anywhere near 
this much space."
	"I wish I didn't." Neil replied, sitting down on the couch, 
gesturing for Mulder to join him. "I've thought about selling out 
and getting a condo, but so much is already happening right now 
- it's been low on the priority list."
	"That's understandable." Mulder sank rather gratefully 
into the leather-covered cushions, stretching his long legs out in 
front of him. 
	The conversation died down into one of those silences 
that somehow, between them, had never managed to be 
uncomfortable. This time, it was broken not by words, but with a 
strident grumble from Neil's stomach.
	While Mulder grinned, Neil rubbed at his belly, 
laughing. "I never got dinner, and I'm starving. I promised you 
some coffee, how about something to eat?" Food had been a 
secondary effort over the past couple months, but right now he 
felt as though he could happily have eaten the proverbial horse.
	"Sure, I'm always hungry," Mulder replied. "Scully says 
I've got a black hole in the bottom of my stomach."
	"Dinner it is then," Neil said, getting to his feet. "Come 
on, the kitchen's back here. I think I've got a couple steaks in the 
freezer."
	"Sounds good." Mulder followed him into another big, 
open room, the walls lined with a surfeit of counter-space and 
cabinets. Next to a double-sink, a big two-door refrigerator-
freezer hummed happily to itself. Neil opened the door, then 
paused, staring inside.
	"Umm, steaks I got." He tossed a paper-wrapped 
package onto the counter, where it hit with a satisfying thump. 
"Other than that? Well, I'm not much of a veggi eater, but I've 
got some frozen corn."
	"That's fine with me, I usually leave the rabbit food to 
my partner."
	Neil smiled, retrieving the plastic bag of sheared corn, 
and dumping it on the counter next to the steaks. 
	"I'll start the coffee maker, do you want anything else in 
the meantime?"
	"What've you got?"
	"Water, tonic water, orange juice..." Neil lifted up that 
carton, opened it and sniffed at it. His eyes screwed shut as he 
yanked it away from his face. "Better scratch the juice. How 
about some Diet Pepsi?"
	"That's fine," Mulder said, moving closer to peer over 
Neil's shoulder as he dumped the gloppy contents of the OJ 
carton down the sink. "Looks like some of the contents of my 
refrigerator," he commented. "Though mine is usually a bit 
further gone."
	Neil grimaced as he turned up the water, watching it 
flush the green floating lumps down the drain. "The worst I've 
ever seen was when one of my girlfriends left a zucchini squash in 
the bottom of my fridge. I didn't notice it until one day I was 
searching for something else. It had almost turned to liquid, 
except for what was stuck to the shelf. The stink wasn't too bad, 
but it had to be one of the grossest things I've ever seen."
	Mulder groaned softly in commiseration. "I think the 
worst spoiled food I've ever seen was the time I left some 
General Tsao's chicken in the fridge just before we got called out 
of town on a case. I came back a couple weeks later, opened the 
fridge door, and nearly suffocated from the fumes. I thought 
something must have crawled in there and died."
	Neil grinned in response, silently appreciating the 
exaggerated look of disgust on Mulder's face, then turned to flip 
on the broiler. They continued to converse lightly while Neil 
prepared the makeshift meal, moving from food to sports, then 
on to politics and books. Mulder made himself useful setting the 
table, though it was done with a typical lack of protocol, the 
knives and forks dumped unceremoniously on the right side of 
the plates, the napkins laid half on top of the silverware.
	By the time the steaks were broiled to a mutually agreed 
well-done, they had made strides into the exploration of each 
other's mundane tastes, the stuff of which most ordinary 
friendships were made, fitting together the pieces skipped over by 
their earlier precipitous plunge into confidence. Yet, somehow, 
having already formed that fragile bond, placing these foundation 
blocks into place was a comforting ritual, weaving around them a 
silken web of understanding to shore up the deeper contact.
	"You mean he actually ATE it?" Neil asked 
incredulously, the fork frozen in mid-air halfway to his mouth. 
Mulder grinned, then shrugged, poking at the few remaining 
kernels of corn on his plate.
	"I don't know - but I think it's likely." Mulder chuckled.
	Neil stared at him with revulsion, his mouth pursed as 
though tasting something sour. He plopped the fork and its 
speared piece of meat down on his plate with a satisfying clunk.
	"Sorry," Mulder told him, with absolutely no trace of 
apology in his voice.
	"You've got to be kidding!" Neil accused. He was 
utterly disgusted, yet he couldn't help seeing the humor in the 
story. He wasn't sure if he wanted to laugh or be sick to his 
stomach.
	Mulder shook his head, adopting an expression of 
exaggerated innocence. "I'm perfectly serious," he said gravely. 
"The case is on file with the FBI and the Florida police. 
Technically it's listed as unsolved, but I'm certain that Scully was 
right. It was Lenny's twin. I saw the little monster running around 
that damned fun house."
	"If you say so... but you don't really believe that the 
geek actually ate it!? I mean...how could he?"
	"I don't know, but I saw him swallow a mouth full of 
crickets, so..." Mulder replied, picking up another piece of steak 
and unconcernedly chewing on it. Neil eyed him with a mixture 
of disbelief and disgust.
	Mulder shrugged, swallowing, then took a drink of his 
coffee. "You get used to it."
	"I think I'll stick with acting," Neil replied, gazing 
unhappily at the remnants of his dinner. "And I don't think I'm 
hungry any more."
	"I'm sorry." This time Mulder really did sound 
repentant. "I promise, no more case-stories while we eat."
	"I'm gonna hold you to that." Neil told him pointedly, 
then with a sigh, he picked up his fork and eased the piece of 
steak into his mouth. When it didn't come alive on him, he 
gratefully chewed and swallowed, ignoring Mulder's obvious 
amusement.
	The subject matter turned on them again, this time to 
some of the more humorous things that can happen when filming 
a movie, especially on the road, and by the time they had finished 
the meal, both men were nearly doubled over in mirth.
	"Now that I'd pay to see," Mulder said, pushing his plate 
under the faucet.
	"How much?" Neil asked, taking the plate from Mulder 
and dumping it into the nearby dishwasher. 
 	"What's the going rate?" Mulder joked back.
	"Next meal's on you and I'll drag out the VCR."
	"Done!"
					- - - - -

	Neil bolted upright, at first uncertain of where he was. 
His legs and arms felt cramped, and he belatedly realized that he'd 
fallen asleep curled up on the sofa. An eerie blue glow from the 
TV screen was the only light in the room, giving a menacing 
quality to the dark shapes of furniture and plants. Sitting up, he 
rubbed at the cramp in his right calf, wincing at the pins-and-
needles lancing through the numbed nerves in his foot.
	"NO!!!! SAMANTHA!!! SAMANTHA!!!!" A terror-
filled scream rent the air, forcing Neil into full awareness. 
Reaching for the lamp, he switched it on, blinking in the sudden 
flood of light. The tormented voice coming from the floor beside 
him sounded again, this time devolving into a sob of such anguish 
that it tore at Neil's senses like fingernails scratching on a 
blackboard.
	"Mulder!" Neil scrambled over to kneel down beside the 
lanky figure of the man curled up on the rug, legs and arms 
drawn in against his shaking chest. The dark-haired head was 
bent down as far into the shelter of the long arms as it could go, 
the exposed muscles of the neck throbbing with each sob.
	Neil hesitated, uncertain what he should do, but another 
broken wail stirred him into action. Grabbing hold of Mulder's 
shoulders, Neil struggled to awaken him.
	"Mulder...Mulder! Wake up!" At first Mulder didn't 
respond, but then, so abruptly it threw Neil sprawling backwards, 
Mulder exploded out of his grasp.
	"NOOO! SCULLY!!" Mulder ended up on all-fours, 
gazing around him wild-eyed, lost, his face contorted with fear 
and rage. His lungs heaving, he slowly fell backwards into a 
sitting position and drew his knees up to his chin. Locking his 
arms around his legs, he huddled against the front of the couch 
like a terrified child.
	Neil got up and moved over to sit beside him. "Are you 
all right?"
	Mulder didn't respond at first, rocking himself slowly 
back and forth. Just as Neil was about to panic, he finally lifted 
his head and stared blankly at the other man's anxious face.
	"Mulder, it's me, Neil. Do you remember where you 
are?"
	Slow recognition dawned in Mulder's stormy, red-lined 
eyes. "Neil?" He blinked, running his hand through his hair, 
forcing the short dark strands into utter disarray. His breath still 
coming hard, he gazed around him, then turned his tear-stained 
gaze back onto Neil.
	"I'm sorry," he whispered hoarsely.
	"For what? You just had a nightmare. Must have been a 
doozy - you were screaming."
	"Yeah," Mulder rested his chin down. "I do that 
sometimes."
	"Want to talk about it?" Neil asked, then nearly 
stumbled over himself in adding, "But only if you want to..."
	Mulder shrugged his shoulder's inward, as though still 
trying to make himself as small as possible. "Nothing unusual. 
You know, the typical stuff."
	"You want some water or something?" Neil felt 
helpless, not knowing how to react to the other man's pain. 
Cautiously, he brushed his fingers over Mulder's shoulder, only to 
jerk away when Mulder flinched.
	"No, I'm fine," Mulder insisted in a raw tone, his entire 
body trembling with the effort necessary to maintain control.
	"You don't sound fine," Neil argued. His sense of 
helplessness, of simply not knowing how to cope with the 
situation, battled with the surprising depth of his concern for his 
new friend, and lost. 
	"Talk to me," he urged. 
	Mulder shook his head silently, but Neil was firm. "It 
can't be any worse not talking about it. Please, I want to help."
	Mulder remained silent for a moment, but it seemed 
inevitable that the words would come. They tumbled out of him, 
falling over each other, bleeding together into one long, unbroken 
breath.
	"I see my sister, floating away from me. I try so hard to 
reach her, but I can't. She rises up into the light, leaving me alone 
in the dark. There are voices yelling at me, taunting me, I can't 
quite make them out at first. Then I hear my father yelling - so 
angry with me. Blaming me, my fault, my fault she's gone. And I 
see her crying in a white room, strapped to this table, men in 
white suits hurting her and then it's not just her, it's Scully too. I 
see flashes of when she was taken, the broken glass crunching 
under my feet. The blood on the table. I try to run to her, I run 
and run and run, but I can never get closer. I can hear her 
screaming for me, 'Mulder I need your help, Mulder!', but I fail 
her. I always fail her." Mulder's voice broke on the last word, 
winding down in a ragged gasp for air, which whistled into his 
lungs and then was heaved outwards.
	Neil reached out to Mulder instinctively, wrapping his 
arms around Mulder's shoulders, enclosing him in a tight 
embrace. This time Mulder didn't flinch away, instead his hands 
reached up to take hold of Neil's arms, the fingers convulsing 
around his wrists.
	"I'm sorry," Neil whispered, futilely. "I'm sorry." 
	Mulder didn't seem to hear him, instead he echoed over 
and over again in a desperate chant, "My fault, my fault, my 
fault..." 	
	"No, no," Neil muttered. He didn't quite understand 
what all of it meant, but it wasn't too hard to figure out the 
basics. "Mulder, stop it! It wasn't your fault."
	"Yes it was, my fault. They were supposed to take me, 
why didn't they take me?" His voice rose into a shriek, "Why 
didn't they take ME?"
	Neil's heart was pounding in his chest. His mind raced, 
searching for the words to offer some kind of comfort, but 
finding himself bereft of answers. This was an utterly new 
situation for him, to be the one providing support to another 
person, to care enough to want to give of himself. Before finding 
his precarious sobriety in the past few months, he had never 
cared enough to feel this way about anyone, and afterwards he 
had been the one in need. Even if he had been aware of another's 
pain, he never would have believed that he had anything to offer. 
But now he found himself in the strange, unfamiliar position of 
wanting to ease this man's pain so badly that it didn't matter. To 
his shock, he realized that he'd willingly give whatever he had to 
give to Mulder, if only he could figure out how.
	"I don't know," he finally said, helplessly. "But you can't 
blame yourself..."
	"My father chose me," Mulder broke in. "I found out, it 
was his choice. He was one of them...he worked for *them*! But 
he wanted out  - and they demanded a hostage to ensure his 
silence about the experiments. So he chose me; he chose to give 
them me. But they took my sister instead. They took the child he 
wanted to keep, and left him with the child he was willing to 
sacrifice. Left him with the child he didn't want!"
	Speaking aloud something that he had held trapped 
inside for months, unable to share the burning agony with 
anyone, even Scully, finally robbed Mulder of any remaining 
control, and he broke into open sobs. His body shook in Neil's 
grasp, shoulders heaving with each cry, tears streaming openly 
down his cheeks and onto Neil's arms as they cradled him. 
	Rocking the man in his arms like a mother cradling her 
infant, Neil let his cheek fall against the silken darkness of 
Mulder's hair. Silently, his own tears began to trickle from 
between his squeezed-shut eyelids. They remained in that 
position for what seemed an eternity, until Mulder's cries 
dwindled into hoarse breathing, and he relaxed limply into Neil's 
embrace.
	Sleep came slowly to them both. Never letting loose 
their hold on each other, they finally surrendered to exhaustion, 
sliding down to lay together on the rug, Mulder's face pressed 
tightly into Neil's chest, Neil's fingers still threaded through 
Mulder's hair.
					- - - - -

	Sunlight found them there, bringing them gently to 
awareness. They separated awkwardly, pulling apart to sit 
shoulder-to-shoulder against the couch.
	"How're you feeling?" Neil asked, trying to stifle a 
yawn.
	"Stiff." Mulder replied. Silence fell, and for the very first 
time between them, it was uncomfortable. The shared 
confidences of the night before had come too fast, explored too 
deep, opened too many wounds. Now, in the bright light of day, 
they were left wobbling, trying to feel their way onto more solid 
ground.
	"Me too." Neil finally responded, rubbing at the back of 
his neck. Getting to his feet, he stumbled towards the kitchen. 
"I'll warm up the coffee. If you want to clean up a little, the 
bathroom's down the hall to your right."
	"Thanks," Mulder found the small room and quickly 
took advantage of the facilities. Then splashing his face and neck 
with water, he stared grimly at his reflection in the mirror. The 
eyes that bored back at him were a dusty brown with a few green 
highlights around the edges of the irises, underlined by deep black 
shadows. He looked paler than usual, and his hair resembled a 
bird's nest, strands spiking out in all directions, the bangs 
covering his forehead in an ebony blanket.
	"You're a mess," he muttered at himself, even as he 
weaved wet fingers through his hair, damping down the worst of 
it. Then giving up the effort for the moment, he wandered back 
out of the bathroom towards the welcoming smell of coffee.
	Neil was sitting at the table, hands clasped around a 
small blue mug. At the sound of Mulder's footsteps, he turned 
around. Mulder winced at the heavy dark shadows marring the 
other man's bright eyes, a match for his own. Taking the seat 
opposite Neil, Mulder stretched out his legs, then closed his 
hands around the steaming cup waiting for him.
	He took a grateful sip, the rich beverage warming his 
stomach, then looking up at Neil, he spoke lightly. "Sorry about 
last night. I didn't mean to keep you up so long."
	Neil shook his head. "That's OK. I never used to sleep 
much, though it's odd not to be hung-over."
	That won a wry, though still slightly embarrassed smile 
from Mulder. "I feel a bit like I *am* hung-over."
	Neil chuckled. "Yeah - it was quite a night." 
	The uncertainty between them shifted again, warmth 
seeping back through the cracks. But Mulder was still feeling an 
intense shyness, a deep sense of embarrassment. An intensely 
private man, it had taken months for him to share as much of 
himself with Scully as he had done in so few hours with Neil. 
Mulder was accustomed to acting on his instincts, but he couldn't 
help worrying that he, as he so often did, had just rushed forward 
off a cliff without looking back. He was not at ease being 
intimate, emotionally or physically, with other people, and for all 
the sharing of the previous night, he had barely known Neil for 
twelve hours. 
	"That it was," Mulder said, faltering. Ducking his head 
down towards the hot drink in his hands, he muttered, "Thanks."
	Neil was grateful that Mulder couldn't see the blush that 
reddened his cheeks. If Mulder felt uncomfortable with the 
suddenness of their relationship, Neil felt terrified. He knew so 
little of how to care for someone, yet he couldn't deny his own 
need for this relationship. The intensity of the desire to have 
someone in his life who liked him rather than the poses he usually 
portrayed to the outside world was frightening. Especially when 
he couldn't escape the nagging feeling that there wasn't really 
anything inside him worth liking, and that sooner or later Mulder 
would realize just how shallow he truly was.
	Struggling in mutual silence with their own personal 
demons, both men jerked in response to the sudden blaring of a 
telephone. Mulder instinctively reached for his cell phone, only to 
belatedly remember that it was still in the pocket of his suit jacket 
which was draped over the couch in the other room. Meanwhile, 
Neil stood up and grabbed the receiver off the wall.
	"Hello?"
	Chris Docknovitch's voice sounded urgently in his ear. 
"Neil? Are you all right? We expected you here half-an-hour 
ago."
	"Half-an-hour? What time is it?"	
	"7:30"
	"What? Shit, I'm sorry Chris, I must have overslept. 
Give me time to grab a quick shower, I'll be there as soon as I 
can."
	"Better meet us down at the courthouse. Ted and I can 
talk to you there before this morning's session."
	"I'll be there, and Chris, I'm sorry about this morning. 
Tell Teddy for me?"	
	"Sure, just get moving."
	"I will, thanks for calling."
	"That's what you're paying me for. See you in... about 
an hour?"
	"Yes, I should be able to make it by then. I'll meet you 
there in an hour."
	Neil hung up and turned back to Mulder. "I was 
supposed to be at my attorney's office half-an-hour ago."
	Mulder glanced at his watch, then groaned aloud. "And 
I'm supposed to be in the office now." He got quickly to his feet. 
"I guess I'd better run back to the hotel and change."
	"You're welcome to shower here if you like," Neil 
offered, gathering up the coffee mugs and dumping them into the 
sink.
	"Thanks, but I'd just have to put the same clothes back 
on," Mulder grimaced down at the rumpled remnants of his suit. 
"Might as well do it right - the Bureau has an image it likes to 
maintain."
	Neil laughed. "You mean they won't appreciate the 
"Miami Vice" look?"
	Mulder shook his head. "Not likely. The FBI leans 
towards the obsessive-compulsive in dress and appearance. They 
don't even like my ties!" 
	Mulder's eyes widened and his lower lip thrust outward 
in a slightly exaggerated pout, but the expression was effective 
enough to hit Neil squarely in the diaphragm. He swallowed hard, 
then grinned.
	"Is that a natural look, or did you practice it?"
	"What?" Mulder was startled for a moment, then he 
laughed. "A little of both. I have an unfortunate tendency to end 
up in hospitals, wounded 'in-the-line-of-duty.' So I've had a lot of 
practice at getting nurses to let me do things the doctors don't 
usually allow." He shrugged.
	"I'll bet it works like a charm. Mind if I borrow it?" Neil 
tried to imitate the expression, not quite capturing it, but getting 
close enough to astonish Mulder.
	"You really *are* good, aren't you?"
	It was Neil's turn to shrug. "I've had a lot of experience, 
and I tend to borrow mannerisms from the people around me."
	"That could get a bit weird." Mulder replied, as they 
walked back into the living room.
	"I never really thought about it, but I guess you're right. 
It's just habit."
	"A good one for an actor, I suppose." 
	"Doesn't hurt," Neil agreed. Once Mulder had gotten 
himself together, reclipping his gun to his waist and donning his 
jacket and shoes, they moved over to the door. Neil opened it to 
let Mulder through, then stood back.
	Mulder paused in the opening, a tall dark figure 
silhouetted against the brilliant California sunshine. The light 
picked up soft reddish-brown highlights in his hair and bronzed 
the color of his skin in contrast to the wrinkled, but still snowy 
white shirt and black jacket. Fumbling in his pocket, he drew out 
a thin, slightly-crumpled business card and extended it to Neil.
	"Here's my card. You can reach me at this number 
anytime, day or night."
	Neil nodded, and took the card, glancing briefly at it. 
"You know where to find me."
	"Yes. Have a...I hope it goes well for you today." 
Mulder shifted uncomfortably on his feet.
	"It'll be fine, Teddy's the best," Neil offered, as much to 
reassure himself as Mulder. But that didn't negate the truth of the 
statement: the one thing that had held him together throughout 
the entire ordeal was his absolute trust in Theodore Hoffman. 
Mulder simply nodded acknowledgment. 
	They stood for an awkward pause, then Neil wished 
Mulder success with the bank case.
	"Sure, it'll be a blast," Mulder replied, grimacing. He 
glanced briefly at his watch. "I'd better get going."
	"Be careful driving down the hill."
	"I will." Mulder turned and was gone into the early 
morning sun.
----------------------
End Part II - A
----------------------

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From: jennyann@ix.netcom.com(Jennifer Lyon)
Newsgroups: alt.tv.x-files.creative
Subject: NEW: "Convergence" XF/M1 xover Part II-B
Date: 11 Mar 1996 05:10:34 GMT


Convergence
Part Two of an X-Files/ Murder One Cross-Over
By Jennifer Lyon
Jennyann@ix.netcom.com, Jenni10647@AOL.com

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Disclaimer: Fox Mulder and The X-Files are the property of 
FOX, Neil Avedon and Murder One are the property of ABC. As 
in most fanfiction, I am taking some liberties with the characters, 
no offense is meant - I'm just having some fun! Mostly I'm just 
ditzing around with my two favorite TV characters. This is a 
direct sequel to "One Day At A Time" and picks up less than an 
hour after the end of the first story. 
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Part II- B

	Neil pushed his way up the steps to the courtroom, 
desperately trying to avoid the microphones being shoved in his 
face. Keeping his eyes focused in front of him, he ignored the 
flash of the cameras and the screams of the crowd. Hands 
grabbed at him, and he twisted away, his arms raised in front of 
his face in an instinctive gesture of self-protection. When he got 
close to the massive oak doors, the courthouse guards finally 
moved in to help, forcing the swarm of reporters back while he 
slid though into the relative safety of the vault-like, air-
conditioned lobby.
	"Neil!" Tall, blond Chris appeared at his side as if by 
magic. Neil sighed aloud in relief, allowing the young attorney to 
steer him towards the elevators.
	"Sorry I'm late. Traffic was awful and I didn't dare risk a 
ticket." 
	"That's all right, you're here now. Teddy's co-opted a 
room upstairs so we can talk before the session starts." Even as 
he spoke, Chris' eyes were carefully studying his client. Since 
being released from the rehab clinic, the former Hollywood 
playboy had been a model of decorum. Except for one night's 
relapse into the bottle, he had remained totally sober, avoided 
parties and bars, and had shown absolutely no sign of touching 
drugs. He always listened intently to his attorney's advice and 
followed it nearly to the letter, without complaint.
	So what was different about him this morning? His 
explanations for his tardiness were perfectly reasonable, everyone 
overslept on occasion, and the traffic HAD been particularly 
awful that morning; a big convention downtown causing one of 
the major freeways to back up for miles. But Neil's manner had 
changed. He was not back to the wild, uncaring arrogance that 
had been his trademark prior to the murder, rather he seemed 
preoccupied, distant. 
	Chris' eyes narrowed as he followed Neil down the hall, 
then directed him towards the interview room Teddy had chosen. 
Just before he reached the door, Chris stopped in the hallway and 
got Neil's attention. Leaning close, he cautiously asked, "Are you 
feeling all right?"
	Neil looked a little surprised, but he nodded. "Yes, I'm 
fine." A boyish smile fleetingly crossed his lips. 
	"Look, Neil, before we see Teddy..."
	A sudden flash of comprehension lit up Neil's eyes, and 
he grinned. "I'm not on drugs, Chris. I haven't touched alcohol or 
anything else. I just had...a good night." 
	"I'm glad to hear that," Chris replied, a touch of apology 
in his voice. The absolute sincerity of Neil's reaction had been 
unmistakable, and there was no doubt that Neil's eyes were clear 
and focused, his hands and stance steady, his manner controlled 
and peaceable. "I'm sorry I had to..."
	Neil gestured in dismissal. "Considering my track 
record, I'd be more surprised if you weren't suspicious. And I do 
appreciate you're asking me straight out. This time we're both in 
luck - I'm dry as a rock."
	"Good," Chris said warmly, clapping Neil on the 
shoulder. "I know this has been a tough ordeal. It's not easy to 
get over drug and alcohol addictions under any circumstances, 
much less in the middle of being on trial for murder. So I hope 
you know that both Ted and I are very proud of you."
	"Thanks," Neil answered, his eyes bright. "That means a 
lot to me. I'd never have made it this far without you."
	"You're welcome. Now let's get in there before Ted 
sends out the cavalry!" Chris said lightly. Neil chuckled and 
opened the door.
					- - - - -

	Rubbing at his nose beneath the stiff plastic frame of his 
reading glasses, Mulder squinted at the microfiche reader. He 
hated these things with a passion, but his desire to know more 
about his new friend had been stronger. Usually a workaholic of 
an extreme sort, when Mulder played 'hookey', he did so with 
equal, and characteristic fervor. Without so much as a word to 
the Bureau, he had gone straight from Neil's house to the police 
station, filed his report on the previous night's incident, then 
convinced a surprisingly obliging police sergeant into giving him 
access to the station's computer and library. 
	Those had provided just enough information to tease his 
insatiable curiosity, the details of the present case being held 
confidential by the DA's office. However, there were other 
avenues to pursue, and Mulder took the short trip to the public 
library filled with a sense of purpose that tripped like an electric 
charge along the edges of his nerves. It had been a while since 
anything had excited his mind like this, his  last few cases with 
Scully had turned out to be hopeless dead-ends, and the present 
interim assignment would make a certain cure for insomnia.
	Mulder turned off the dizzying screen and leaned back 
into his chair. Dropping his glasses onto the table, he closed his 
eyes. Despite the intensity of the abrupt and total sense of 
communion he knew Neil and he had both experienced, there 
were still so many unanswered questions. For all his tendency to 
make leaps of faith, Fox Mulder had a cynical streak that ran 
deep. Perhaps Neil's case was exactly what it appeared - the 
pathetic story of a man so lost to drugs and alcohol that he 
committed a crime he couldn't remember. Or was there more to 
it, a deeper conspiracy at work? Was Neil a murderer or a 
victim? If he was innocent, then who was guilty? And last, but 
hardly least, why did he, Mulder, care at all?
	He did care. That one simple fact was inescapable. With 
typical recklessness, he'd opened himself up and let Neil in past 
the barriers that normally stood high and unscaleable between 
him and the rest of the world. It could, perhaps, have been that 
he had felt alone, missing Scully's steadying, soothing presence by 
his side, adrift in a place where he was unwanted and unneeded. 
Neil had needed him, desperately, and perhaps that was what had 
drawn him in. Mulder's mind drifted back to another lost soul he 
had known, a woman whose face had known its only peace in 
death. Lucy had given her life to save another from her own fate, 
a sacrifice that had left him both awed and grief-stricken. 
	Even Scully had never understood what Lucy meant to 
him, and in a sudden flash of comprehension, Mulder realized 
that he too had never fully understood. Until now. For it had not 
been the image of his lost sister that he had seen when he stared 
into her tormented eyes, rather it had been the distorted, yet 
somehow painfully true, reflection of himself. Neil was the same, 
he now knew with clear recognition. When he looked at Neil, it 
wasn't difficult for the naturally empathic, well-trained 
psychologist to read between the lines, to see the fears and 
insecurities only barely covered by the drugs and wild behavior. 
Mulder felt like he was staring into a mirror, looking at the 
reverse image of himself. The fear of abandonment, the sense of 
personal worthlessness and failure in one man led to an insatiable 
appetite for attention and sexual companionship, and in the other 
formed a wall between him and human contact. One tried to 
avoid his pain with the oblivion of chemical dependency, the 
other wallowed in it, using his own agony as a shield against the 
world. 
 	Mulder saw clearly the could-have-been's, the almost-
had-been's of his life laid out before him. Only his desire to avoid 
becoming like his father, a silent sense of rebellion raging deep 
within his soul, had kept him from falling into the sweet 
temptation that alcohol and drugs offered. He had felt that need, 
and had refused it, choosing near total abstinence in an 
unacknowledged, silent understanding that the road downwards 
would be an easy fall. For he knew well that he could lose himself 
in that oblivion with a terrifying ease.
	However, he had somehow held fast, choosing another 
path. It was no less wrought with self-destruction, although it 
was less openly so. His quest for his sister, for the truth, had 
become his drug, his meaning, and he had let no one and nothing 
walk in its way. But when he looked into the eyes of a Lucy 
Householder or a Neil Avedon, he felt that connection stir within 
his heart. He *knew* them, for they were himself, as he might 
have been, and could still be. And yet, there was a silver lining to 
that cloud, for each of them had held within them their own 
salvation. Lucy had found hers in the simple act of trading her life 
for that of a child, and Neil was fighting his own way out of the 
depths of hell. Slowly, painfully, he was pushing aside the 
darkness and staring like a newborn child into the light of day.
	Mulder could not walk away, and a part of his mind 
acknowledged that it had never really been a question. No one 
else might understand, not even Scully, but it didn't matter. If he 
could stretch out a hand in understanding to Neil, he'd also in a 
profound way be stretching out a hand to himself. 		
						- - - - -

	Neil absentmindedly stirred his tea, breathing in the 
steam rising from the large plastic cup. Somehow he'd gotten into 
the habit of drinking this with his meals, perhaps simply because 
it was less cloying than coffee yet provided a pleasant warmth to 
his hands. His mind wandered, his eyes drifting towards the large 
glass windows that lined Ted Hoffman's spacious office. Sunlight 
streamed through cracks in the blinds, splintering the carpet into 
lines of black and white. In the distance he could make out the 
shadow of towers, downtown LA surprisingly clear in the midday 
sun. 
	The fog had lifted for the time being, and in a strange 
way that was exactly how he felt himself. For now his vision was 
clear - clearer than it had been for much of his life. The panic was 
still there, pooled in his belly like a dead weight, but there was 
also a buoyant warmth easing the pressure. Memories of the 
night before kept racing past his eyes, fragments of vision, of 
sound, of sensation warring for supremacy. Laughter, tears, the 
pounding of adrenaline rushing in his veins swept through him, 
soothed by the memory of the way another man had felt sobbing 
in his arms. A sign of trust, of sharing, that had left him humbled 
in its wake, terrified of failing, yet desperate to hold on to all that

it meant. Perhaps it was foolish to trust so quickly, but the feeling 
of understanding between them had been so strong...
	"NEIL!!!" Droplets of hot tea splashed over his hand, 
causing him to gasp as he spun in response to the insistent 
summons. Quickly setting the cup down, and suckling on the 
back of his hand, he turned startled black eyes towards an 
imperious Theodore Hoffman. 
	"Yes, Teddy?" He replied, wishing he didn't sound quite 
so hesitant.
	Both attorneys stared at him for a moment, then Ted 
asked him outright, "What's wrong?"
	"Nothing's wrong."
	Neither appeared convinced, and Neil drew in a deep 
breath before committing himself to an explanation of his present 
distraction. A part of him desperately wanted to keep the 
memory of this night private, to hold the new-found friendship 
inside - something all his own, like a secret treasure. But this was 
Teddy Hoffman waiting for him to answer, and Neil owed him 
the truth. He owed him his life, his sobriety, and any chance he 
had for a future. Besides, he trusted Teddy absolutely. He had 
learned the hard-way that the number of people he could truly 
call 'friend' was probably less than the number of fingers on one 
of his hands. He was certain that Mulder could be trusted, but he 
had to accept that Teddy might question that assumption. 
Regardless, the story had to be told.
	"I guess I should have said something sooner, but I 
kinda wanted to keep it to myself for a little while." Both of his 
attorney's faces took on an alarmed look, and he gestured to 
them to relax.
	"Don't worry. I just had a bit of an adventure last 
night..."
					- - - - -

	Mulder blinked as he left the relatively dim, cool interior 
of the library for the sun-baked streets of LA. Shading his eyes 
with his left hand, he pushed his way through the noon-time 
crowds, searching for his rental car. It was parked haphazardly 
against the curb, and his eyes flew with first concern and then 
relief from the red sign in the parking meter to the empty front 
windshield of the car. A moment later, he was inside the vehicle, 
the air-conditioner blasting a remnant of hot air as he pulled into 
traffic.
	Driving almost randomly, he reached quickly for his cell 
phone when it rang. Hoping it was NOT the LA Office 
demanding to know where he was, he abruptly spoke his name 
into the receiver.
	"It's me." Scully's voice was a pleasure to his ear, and 
his face lightened in a smile.
	"Hey Scully. How's the mom-to-be doing?"
	"She's fine. A little anxious, but excited." 
	"I'm sure. When's your brother getting home?"
	"Tomorrow," Scully replied. She fell silent for the space 
of a couple breaths, and when she spoke, her voice was hard-
edged. "Mulder, what on earth's going on?"
	"What do you mean?" He asked, every muscle in his 
body tensing. An odd, yet familiar sensation of a disturbing 
prescience pricked at his mind, somehow he just knew what she 
was going to say.
	"You asked me to look into the Goldilocks case, 
remember?"
	"Yes... What did you find?"
	"Not much. I had barely started to run the man, Cross, 
through the NCIC, when I suddenly got called into Skinner's 
office."
	"Skinner? What did *he* want?" Mulder's hand gripped 
tightly on the steering wheel, his knuckles bleaching white with 
the stress.
	"To know what I - we - were up to. Somehow Cross' 
name must have set off some bells, and they came crashing down 
on Skinner's head. Orders are to back off from this case. We are 
not to get involved."
	"You've got to be kidding!" It wasn't really a question, 
Mulder didn't doubt her word. However, his mind was reeling, 
this was the one thing he had never expected.
	"No, I'm sorry, Mulder. But Skinner says to stay away 
from this case. Leave it to the police and the courts. It's already 
in trial."
	"An innocent man is on trial!"
	"Innocent is hardly the word to use for Neil Avedon," 
she interrupted harshly.
	"Innocent is exactly the word to use," Mulder retorted, 
rushing ahead before she had a chance to reply. "Regardless, 
Scully, why would the powers-that-be care if you run a check on 
Richard Cross? Who's behind the pressure on Skinner to shut me 
out of this case? The very fact that *they* are interested has to 
mean that something's going here, something more than a drug-
associated rape-murder. It IS *they*, isn't it, Scully?"
	"Mulder..." He could hear the exasperation in her voice, 
as clearly as he could imagine the accompanying expression on 
her face, mouth pursed, eyebrow arched. Then even the very 
nature of her breathing changed, and he felt her expression 
darken as she spoke. 
	"Yes. Yes, it is. Mulder...just be careful, please..."
	"Always, Scully. Always..." he replied, his lips curving 
in a wry smile that never touched his wary eyes. Hitting the 'end' 
button, he dropped the cell phone onto the empty seat beside 
him. His gaze appeared focused on the sun-drenched pavement in 
front of him, but only a tiny portion of his brain was actually 
involved in steering the car through the steady stream of traffic. 
The remainder was asking questions, trying to fit together a 
seemingly random set of pieces into some semblance of a whole. 
Above all, one thought kept circling his mind like a vulture 
waiting to strike. How were *they* - the nameless, nearly 
faceless, powerful government forces that always seemed to be 
one step ahead of him, thwarting him at every corner in his quest 
to expose the truth -  involved in Neil Avedon's nightmare?
	His resolve was as certain as the heat of the brilliant 
noonday sun; he didn't have the answer yet, but find it, he would.

End Part Two

-- 
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jennyann@ix.netcom.com        Jenni10647@AOL.com
	  X-Phile	    -    True Believer	

"Sometimes the need to mess with their heads outweighs 
the millstone of humiliation." Fox Mulder  "The X-Files"

"What's the going rate for putting an innocent man away 
for the rest of his life, Doctor?" Ted Hoffman  "Murder One"
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