From: "spookey247" Date: Thu, 18 Jan 2001 09:47:36 -0500 Subject: xfc: Dreaming Omega (1 of 7) NC-17 by Spookey247 Source: xfc Title - Dreaming Omega (1/7) Author - Spookey247 (spookey247@msn.com) Archive - at Gossamer, anywhere else, please ask first! Rating - NC -17 for profanity and strong sexual content Classification - TRA Adventure/Romance/Angst (Mulder/Scully, Mulder/other) Disclaimers - Mr. Carter, and folks at Fox, I'm just borrowing, it's all just for fun so don't sue me! Title for this section is borrowed from Robert Smith of the Cure. Spoilers - Big big spoiler for Sein Und Zeit/Closure. Keywords - Mulder/Scully Romance,Mulder/other Romance Summary - Sein Und Zeit/Closure post-episode. Mulder's having a nervous breakdown and taking a road trip to celebrate. Scully's in pursuit, but she may end up losing him forever (in more ways than one.) Thanks - To Kim for Beta assistance and Sister Sarah for editing and inspiration! Author's Note: It will enhance your enjoyment to listen to Massive Attack REALLY LOUD while you read this! Derange and Disengage: One I dreamed she was cutting my hair. It was morning and I was sitting half-dressed in her kitchen. Sunlight streamed through the blinds like melted butter and, even in my dream state, I'm sure I could smell coffee brewing. The scissors were a blur in her hands. Little hairs were flying everywhere like shards of marble from a sculptor's chisel. As if I were Michelangelo's statue, trapped in stone, and she was setting me free. I don't know where I got so much hair, but she kept on cutting and the hairs kept flying. We were both laughing. It was our private joke, something only we would understand. It's hard to imagine how those images could seem erotic, but somehow, in the dream world, that haircut was just as good as foreplay. I woke up wishing to have her beside me, longing to roll over and wake her with a kiss. I'll never forget that morning. It was the first day I knew all she meant to me. FBI HEADQUARTERS, WASHINGTON, DC 8:30 AM "Scully! I heard you broke the La Pierre case. Nice work out there..." Dammit. This is just what I need this morning: a pat on the back from the star of the Bureau Boys' club. I should have taken the stairs. I shrug and check my watch. "It was a hunch that panned out." "Always the modest one. Hey, do you want to get a drink sometime this week?" "I'll have to get back to you on that, Morrison." "Yeah, well, do that. Whoops, here's my floor. Have a pleasant day, Agent Scully." I nod to Stanley Morrison politely, but what I really want to do is stamp my foot like a spoiled five-year- old. The entire workforce of the Bureau must have decided to use this elevator today. The basement seems miles away. It's maddening. I have tried a dozen different ways of explaining it to myself over the last hour. His home phone ringing and ringing and ringing. No machine, no nothing. His cell phone ringing, and ringing, and ringing. After many, many tries, still no Mulder. I have the weirdest feeling in the pit of my stomach. I shouldn't have left him alone. So much has happened. His mother's suicide, discovering Samantha's diary... to say that the events of the last few days have been overwhelming is to understate the situation entirely. Mulder doesn't know who or what to believe. Was his mother trying to tell him something? Was the diary we found real, or some kind of elaborate fabrication? We did find solid evidence that Samantha disappeared out of a locked room in a California hospital in 1979, but the trail ends there. That fact will never lead us to any concrete answers. Mulder thinks he knows what happened to his sister, but I can't grasp it. It's beyond me how he could embrace all that talk about walk-in spirits and starlight and divine intervention by old souls. Even for Mulder, it's way, way out there. I don't know what to believe, either. I don't know how to behave. Especially after what he said to me last night. The elevator finally reaches the basement. I pray silently to find him sitting behind his desk like it's just another day. Given the circumstances, I know that is a completely unreasonable request. NATIONAL SEASHORE, HATTERAS ISLAND, NORTH CAROLINA 8:43 AM A long bridge winds serpentine across the Oregon Inlet. My car is running on fumes and I've got the first bottle from a six pack of Newcastle between my knees. God, it's beautiful here. I'm glad I came. I've always known I would be. Once upon a time, Diana and I were supposed to come here on vacation but instead she left me and I came by myself. I remember how right it felt to be here, lost between the ocean and the sky, like there was nothing more natural than being alone in the world. I daydreamed about walking into the ocean without looking back, laughing at the thought of some middle- aged fisherman reeling in my corpse. It's the classic story: boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy winds up as prizewinning catch in sport fishing tournament. Ever since then I have fantasized about finishing it here. I've been praying a lot lately, which is pretty funny since I don't believe in God. My prayer goes something like this: Let me be dead or like the dead...Let me be dead or like the dead... I've murmured these words incessantly since my mother's death, moving somnambulant through the events of the past days, giving my attention to whatever required it but all the while begging for my heart to be frozen. I tried to tell Scully, but it was no good, an ill- considered decision. When women find out how crippled I am they always turn away. I thought things would be different with her, but now I know better. She will turn away; in fact, she already has. I don't know why I'm surprised. She's known what I am for years. I arrive at my intended destination. At this time of day the parking lots are empty. With no houses nearby there is little danger of interruption by joggers or old folks with dogs. When I cut the motor the sudden hush is almost like a caress. I drain my beer. The breeze is fresh and salty, rustling the grasses in the marsh across the highway. I take a minute to listen to the birds. Beyond the dunes to my left I can hear the roaring of the sea. There's a backpack full of emergency supplies in the trunk of my car. I dump its contents and replace them with the rest of the Newcastles and my gun. I add my wallet to the heap of rubble in the trunk and remove my shirt and shoes. Even though it's late September and the air is far from warm, I'm hot. I've been hot for days. Smothered. Stifled and defeated like the air in mid-summer. She'll have to come south to identify my body. I wonder if I should leave her a note. Yeah, right. A pathetic scrap of paper scrawled with lame excuses...that's a fitting ending to eight years of friendship. There's nothing I could possibly say that could make her understand. I leave my keys on the front seat as a favor to the cops. The path through the dunes is hard work. My head aches. It seems like ages since the last time I slept or ate. Somewhere inside me there is a voice shouting about the effects of exhaustion on my judgment. Screaming desperately for me to question my perceptions, which have obviously been co-opted by forces beyond my control. Take a break, it begs, think about this all again after you've had a chance to rest. She told me to rest, too. Scully did. That seems like a long time ago. Maybe she was right. Maybe I should re- think this. But I'm here now. I've come this far. I've never been more ready. ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA 9:45 AM The floor lamp is completely mangled, its base rammed into the screen of the television. There is a faint smell of smoke in the air and I reach over and unplug the set. Who did this? Was it Mulder? I know the answer to that question. His living room is a wreck. Everything is shattered: the windows, the picture frames, the fish tank... oh god, the poor fish. I really need to sit down but there's nowhere to sit; a knife from the kitchen protrudes like a signpost from the shredded guts of the couch. I kneel down for a closer look but I know I shouldn't disturb it. A smear of blood covers the handle. I close my eyes. God, please don't let this be a crime scene. I follow a trail of blood droplets to the bedroom door, which is closed. "Mulder, it's me," I say. My voice echoes through the quiet, sounding strained and bizarre. "Are you in there?" I knock gently, fighting to breathe, struggling to swallow. I draw my gun out of habit; it's something to hide behind, at least, something to make me brave. I turn the knob. His bedroom looks like the cleaning lady left five minutes ago. He has not slept in his bed. The bathroom door is ajar and I follow the trail of blood closer and closer, feeling more faint by the moment. My gun leads me forward, the hinges squeak slightly as the door swings open... "Mulder?" He's not here. There is blood, though, smeared on the door frame and dried in drops on the floor and the lavatory. It's not much blood, I tell myself. He cut himself when he was destroying his furniture...oh god, where is he? The holster from his service revolver lies empty on his dresser. He has placed his watch and his cell phone beside it. In contrast to the chaos in the next room, these three objects are lined up with perfect symmetry exactly in the center of the rectangular surface, a still life of the despair I glimpsed last night. They speak to me, leaving no doubt; Mulder does not plan to return. Yesterday as we were leaving the airport I had a strong feeling of foreboding. Mulder looked more tired than I had ever seen him, his face deeply lined and slightly swollen. During the flight from Sacramento he had not spoken, choosing instead a steady communion with the empty tray table before him. I had glanced his way from time to time, making offhand comments that garnered no response. He was suffering intensely. I'm sure I was the only one who could tell. On the ground at National I offered to buy him dinner, but he turned me down. He needed to be alone, he said. His voice was uncharacteristically gentle, and he even put his arms around me to hug me good-bye, but it was a meaningless embrace. He was cold and distant; I could have been hugging a piece of granite wrapped in a trench coat. He lingered that way for a moment and I thought he might have more to say, but then he released me abruptly, grabbed his bag, and walked off in a hurry without looking back. When I got home yesterday afternoon, I tried to take it easy. I needed to rest. I needed to escape. It was no use, though. The memory of his bleak expression would not leave my mind. I finally gave up and drove to Alexandria. Whether he preferred to be alone or not, I really needed to know he was okay. When I arrived at his apartment, his front door was ajar. I looked in and he was sitting in the glow of the fish tank, his face half-hidden in the lengthening shadows. He did not look up at me as I came into the room and sat down next to him, so I touched his knee lightly to get his attention. "Mulder? Are you alright?" After a long time he spoke, but his voice sounded small, like a child describing a nightmare in the dark. "Do you believe that we're never tested beyond what we can endure?" I didn't have an answer. My thoughts raced back to Mulder sitting in a deserted diner in Sacramento, his sister's diary resting delicately in his large, trembling hands. I felt so helpless, watching him as he read Samantha's last desperate words, his rigid expression barely masking his anguish. I wanted to put my arms around him, but that night it wasn't an option. His stubborn insistence on working with that quack psychic, Harold Pillar, had put a wall between us. I know he thought I was closed- minded and unsympathetic to his pain, and I, for my part, was hurt that he couldn't see how much I cared, how much I wanted to help him. I had accompanied Mulder to California because I was afraid for him. I could see that his emotional balance was listing dangerously and I wanted to keep him safe. The events of the trip, though, were a runaway train. I returned to Washington feeling betrayed, knowing it was not possible to protect him from whatever it was he sought. Knowing beyond the shadow of a doubt that he did not want to be protected. I came back because I had information he desperately needed, but, in the end, Mulder wouldn't listen to most of what I had to say. He wouldn't trust my judgment, even when his own was so terribly out of kilter. By the time he found Samantha's diary I felt like I barely knew him. The distance between us then was painful; a sharp contrast to what we had shared so recently, on the night I had to tell Mulder the truth about his mother's suicide. I have never felt closer to Mulder than I did then. He did not try to hide his rage and grief as he did in Sacramento. He opened himself to me, accepting the physical comfort I offered him without question or reservation. As I sat with Mulder on his couch last night, it occurred to me that I have always taken his strength for granted. He's been like a superhero to me: meeting all challenges with ironic wit and nerves of steel. I had never seen him so defeated: sitting stock-still with his body slumped inward, his voice trembling with suppressed rage. "It's all been a waste, Scully. I don't know what to do." Maybe sometimes we *are* tested beyond what we can endure. He took my hand. His skin was hot. "This may not make much sense but I'm just going to say it." "It's okay, Mulder. I'm listening." "My life has been a lot of crap up to this point." "You know that's not true." His voice dropped to a whisper. "I'm sick of being set up. I don't belong to them. Scully, listen. It's coming to an end. Now only one thing is real." I waited for him to continue, but instead he sat studying my hand, holding it gently, as if I was made of expensive crystal. I could see him laboring inside his mind, chipping words loose from ancient bedrock and dragging them to the surface. After several minutes of toil, he spoke softly. "Scully, the only thing that's real is how I feel about you." "Mulder, you're exhausted," I suggested gently. At first I could not understand. Was this supposed to be some sort of confession? Did it mean what it seemed to mean? He was spent, a starving animal dying of exposure in the climate of our harsh reality. I knew that it was possible to warm him, to give him sustenance as I have so many times before. I had to stop and think, though: were we different now, because of the words he had just spoken? Was comfort still just comfort? Or had it become something more? I knew that Mulder was saying he was in love with me. It was typical of him not to confess his feelings outright, couching them in what I sometimes think of as Mulder-speak, an allusion to emotions that may or may not exist, a riddle of the heart that always leaves the ball in my court. I will never, never forget what happened next. I knew I should have been thinking more clearly, but that moment was so rich with potential that the literal world ceased to exist for me. There was no past to reconcile, no future to consider; in fact, it seemed possible that actions would no longer have any consequences at all. It had never seemed more simple; Mulder and I could be together, free from grief, unhindered by the darkness of our circumstances. Unable to stop myself, I reached toward Mulder's face, slowly tracing the line of his jaw with a single finger. He gathered my palm to his mouth, his eyes never leaving my face. The moment slowly unfolded; a tremor ran through my body as his breath blossomed upon my skin. "Scully." I felt myself floating as he pulled me close. I wanted to close my eyes and give myself to him completely, as I have so often in fantasy, but instead I could not help but watch him, a witness to his agony as he brought his mouth to mine. Something was terribly wrong. Our lips came together, and my body responded instantly to the pleasure of his kiss. I pressed against him, breathless, but even as I felt my body mold to his, even as his arm circled my back to draw me closer, misgivings clamored for my attention. Suddenly I willed my lips not to part. I needed time to think things through. But my lips weren't listening to the doubts in my mind. There was nothing I could do. His tongue dived into my mouth, filling it, filling me. My god, he tasted good... He murmured, hushed, his mouth brushing mine. "Scully, stay with me. Be with me tonight." My nerve endings were standing on end. Yes, Mulder. Oh, yes. Last night slowly vanishes from my mind and I am standing in the rubble of Mulder's apartment wondering what to do. Last night I tore away from him and moved quickly to the other side of the room. The raw passion in his kiss was what drove me away. All at once, I realized just how hot and cold our relationship has always been. As recently as yesterday afternoon he had been closed and remote, like a total stranger, but last night, when I went to check on him, the unexpected fervency of his desire took my breath away. What would it be next? It was almost impossible to deny my body what it had wanted for so long. My blood raced in my veins and pounded in my head as I held myself back from him. In my rational mind, I knew I was doing the right thing, but I felt like I was having a heart attack. "Scully, what's wrong?" Mulder had asked hoarsely. He spoke with his eyes cast downward; I think he already knew what my answer would be. "I don't know if we should do this," I gasped. Mulder spun on his heel and stalked to a window, flinging it open, sucking in the cool air of evening. He stood with his back to me, bloodless fingers wrapped around the windowsill, ready to rip it right out of the wall. I wanted to reassure him, but I didn't know how. His need was like a vortex and I was terrified to step too close. I wish I could have put my arms around him. If only I could have felt him relaxing into me, then I could have mustered the clarity of mind to speak without hurting him again. But he didn't want to be held, not for comfort, anyway, that much was clear. "Mulder, try to understand. Tonight...the last few days...you're in shock. You're not yourself and that scares me. I need some time to think. I need to know that we're doing this for the right reasons." My words shot through him like venom. His voice was choked and savage. "I can't believe you said that. God, Scully, what is there to think about?" I went to him despite my uncertainty, laying my hands on his shoulders. He shuddered with rage and moaned when I touched him, "Dammit, Scully. Goddammit. You have no idea...Why can't you just..." He pulled from me roughly and paced across the room, his body drawn up tight, his breathing convulsive and ragged. "Maybe I should go. Mulder, you need to get some rest. I do want to talk about this tomorrow." He did not answer. "I'll call you in the morning." He nodded almost imperceptibly, staring at the floor, pale as death. Then his hand brushed against a framed picture on his desk. Without looking to see what it was, he snatched it up and hurled it against the wall. The superhero façade splintered before my eyes last night and I did not recognize the person who stood behind it. It was shocking to sense so much violence in someone I thought I knew so well. I wish I hadn't left him alone, but I did. I had to. It was not safe to stay. End of Part One Title - Dreaming Omega (2/7) Author - Spookey247 (Spookey247@msn.com) Derange and Disengage: Two NATIONAL SEASHORE, HATTERAS ISLAND 10:02 AM I drop the empty bottle from my third beer into my backpack. I've got a good seat near the waterline, perfect for watching the waves as they begin to creep into shore. The steady wind erodes my soul. It's lonely here. I'm grateful for that. For some reason, I'm remembering the way my mother's hands looked when I was a child. When I was little I thought all women's hands must be like hers: slender and smooth with creamy pastel pink nails... hands that are meant to look nice, hands that never get dirty, not the kind of hands that you hold. Once when I was about four she sat down with me and played a game with green army men. That's one of my lasting childhood memories, pink fingernails and little green men and my mother sitting with me on the floor, pregnant and smiling, just before Samantha was born. I've done everything in my power to help my sister, but everything has failed. I feel her absence as keenly now as I did when I was twelve. The ache is familiar, the pain jealously hoarded, as much a part of me as my limbs or my face. It's driven me. It's made me what I am. Grief is a relentless trickle that leaks through my arms and legs, seeping into my fingers and toes, solidifying my insides by increments. I know I will never lose this feeling. It gnaws at my heart like a rat in a trap. I am watching myself, as if I was a bird circling in the sky above my body. I am watching myself take the safety off my gun. Nothing matters now. This is easy, it's a piece of cake, one quick squeeze and I'll fly. I raise my gun and place the barrel inside my mouth. "You shouldn't put that in your mouth 'cause you don't know where it's been." I drop the gun hastily into the backpack. Looking at me with a toothy grin is a little girl, long eyelashes framing large brown eyes, wispy white blond hair framing a round golden face. I think she must be four or five. Her eyes are intensely bright. She stands near my shoulder, close enough to touch, smelling of sunscreen and fresh strawberries. How the hell did this happen? Down the beach I see a blanket, chairs, and a red cooler. A man and two women are settling in, pulling off unnecessary clothing, putting on sunscreen. I must have walked far enough to travel from one beach access to the next. If she hadn't come I would have shot myself in front of them. Some day at the beach. The little girl puts her hand on my shoulder and regards me gravely. Her presence is so warm I can hardly bear it. "If you wanna learn to fly, I can show you, 'cause I know how." For a moment we say nothing, then she sticks out her tongue at me and runs off down the beach. Jesus Christ, what am I doing here? Shit, was I going to shoot myself? Is that really what I want? I open another beer and cradle my head. This is unbearable. It always has been. "Excuse me, did a little girl come by here?" The girl's mother looks panicked. She is about thirty, tall and lithe in a rose colored string bikini. For a few seconds I can't organize my thoughts enough to speak. "Uh, yeah...maybe five minutes ago. I didn't see which way she went." "God, I can't turn my back on her for a minute. Every time I do I end up regretting it." She is gone again, headed toward the water, calling her daughter's name into the wind. Her fear is well- justified...the beach is big and empty and as I look up and down I see no sign whatever of the child who was here such a short time ago. "Gabriel! Gabriel!" The woman's shouts grow increasingly urgent and she wades helplessly into the water, clearly believing her child has been pulled under the waves. I was the last to speak with the girl, though, and her parting words are still fresh in my mind. I rise from the sand and look around. Where would I go if I wanted to fly? I am watching myself walking trance- like toward the high dunes that separate the beach from the highway beyond. Effortlessly, I follow the path of least resistance until the dunes surround me on all sides like the walls of a maze. I loved sand dunes when I was a kid. They seemed like miniature mountains, made just for me. "I will jump from a good high spot and fly up, up, up! I will be going too fast to look at things, so I will shut my eyes." She sounds close by. I move in the direction of her childish soprano, faint over the din of the ocean but getting louder by the moment. "Little Bear climbed to the top of a little hill, and climbed to the top of a little tree, a very little tree on the little hill, and shut his eyes and jumped!" I round the bend in time to see her tumbling down a high dune. She lands near my feet and looks up at me with a smile so artless and full of life it takes my breath away. She is helpless with giggles, obviously very pleased with herself as she continues her recitation, "My, my, he said, here I am on the moon. The moon looks just like the earth." I remember that book. "Hi," I say. "Are you a bear from earth?" She nods, delighted. I squat down next to her. "Is your name Gabriel?" She nods again, face suddenly serious. "That's a boy name but I'm not a boy." "I can see that. Listen, Gabriel, my name is Fox, and I came to look for you because your mom is very worried." Gabriel laughs and scrambles back up the dune. "Me and Daddy play hide and seek at the beach." "I don't know if your Mom knows that. She's looking for you and she's really sad. She thinks you got lost. Do you want to go with me, back to the beach?" She perches at the top of her dune, digging her pink sandals into the sand. "I'm not apposta play with a stranger. I have to ask my mom first." "That's good. I'm glad you have that rule. That's really smart." "Gabriel! Answer me! Gabriel!" I can hear the mother near the edge of the dunes. "Here!" I shout as loudly as I can. "She's here!" In a few moments Gabriel's mother appears, struggling to run in the deep sand, completely out of breath. "Mama, I was being Little Bear flying to the moon! Watch!" Gabriel shuts her eyes and jumps, rolling down to her mother's embrace. "Gabriel Anne Cahill, running off is not okay." Wiping tears away with the back of her hand, Gabriel's mother hugs her daughter tighter. "I thought you went under the water." Gabriel touches her mother's tears with fascination. "I'm okay, Mama. I'm not under the water." "I know, and I'm really glad. But next time you want to play up here you have to come with me. You're not allowed to come by yourself. Okay?" "Okay, Mama." This reunion is almost more than I can take. There is nothing sinister in this situation, no hint of a threat, just a small child who wandered away for a few minutes and was quickly tracked down; nevertheless, its deeper significance is not lost on me. Gabriel's mother stands up and her daughter heads straight up the dune to continue her game. "God, thank you so much," she tells me. "When I realized she was gone I jumped to the worst possible conclusion. You were smart to think of looking up here." "When I saw her on the beach she said she wanted to fly." I want to fly. She offers a hand. "I'm Joy." My heart is racing; I watch from the sky as I take it in my own. It is warm and alive. "Fox Mulder." "Wow. Cool name." She is open and friendly; I can't escape the feeling I've met her somewhere before. There's a certain familiarity to the way she regards me, like she's waiting for me to guess a secret. "Yeah. Uh, I've got to get back..." "What, to the beach?" "To my car. I've got to go." I need to get back to my gun. I need to finish it now. "Well, thanks again for your help." "No problem." I take a few steps backwards and turn to leave them but somehow my brain isn't talking to my legs anymore; I'm so fucking hot; I can feel the earth turning...all the energy drains out of my body and the ground comes up to meet me fast. "Hey, are you okay?" She kneels beside me. "Yeah, I think so...what happened?" I roll onto my side and try to sit up. "You passed out, that's what. Hey, you better lie still for a minute." "I'm fine..." "Are you sick? God, your hand looks awful." "It's fine...looks worse than it is." Joy reaches out and lays her hand against my forehead. "So you say. It looks infected to me. What'd you do to split it open like that?" "I don't really remember." "Are you sure? Because you might need a tetanus shot. God, you don't want to fuck around with stuff like this. You could get blood poisoning or gangrene or that flesh eating bacteria..." "You take this mother thing really seriously, don't you?" "Very funny, Mister Tough Guy. I could pretend like I don't give a shit and let you lie in the sand if you want. But then the crabs might get you." "I'm fine. It's just I haven't eaten." When was my last meal? A dry and tasteless turkey sandwich on the plane from Sacramento, I think. That was over 24 hours ago. Since then it's been nothing but alcohol. I wanted it that way. I was supposed to be dead by now. She puts her arm around me, helping me sit. Her skin is smooth against the flesh of my shoulders. "You haven't eaten? Damn, buddy, no wonder you passed out. You had a lot to drink last night. Let me guess; you didn't sleep, either." "No...I think I was walking all night..." Wait a minute. How the hell does she know how much I drank last night? "Excuse me, have we met?" "Ah, the light goes on. I was wondering if you would remember." "Well, when I first saw you, you seemed familiar, but no, I don't remember." Suddenly I get a flash. A dive in Nags Head. A friendly blonde behind the bar. "Wait. Were you the bartender..." "Yep. So see, I've earned the right to mother you 'cause it's partially my fault." She smiles brightly and sits down next to me in the sand. "Shit." Gabriel piles into Joy's lap and puts a small hand on mine. "You fell down. Did you get hurt?" "No, I'm fine. I just needed to rest." Joy gives me a mockingly significant stare. "Any other details coming back?" "What kind of details?" She grins in response to my look of surprise. This is getting weirder and weirder. "This isn't funny. What kind of details?" "I'm sorry. I'm not trying to be mysterious. It was my ex. He was hanging around the bar at closing time being really drunk and obnoxious and you offered to shut him up." "No way." "You got a really big round of applause from the bar." Another flash. A heavy male face, angry, Nordic, like a Viking on acid. "Wait. Was he a big guy?" "He's built like a rhinoceros. They were taking bets on how quick he was going to kick your ass." "Anybody make any money?" "Well, they probably would have, but we called the cops." I do remember some sort of a scuffle. I could have dreamed it, though, for all the details my head will cough up. "Was it...I remember...did I help the bouncer take him outside or something?" "Actually, the bouncer is my brother. And 'take him outside' is a pretty polite way of putting it." I touch a bruise on the side of my head. "I wondered where this came from." "It's funny. I never laid eyes on you before last night and somehow you end up coming to my rescue two separate times in the same twelve hour period. Isn't that nuts? I mean, what are the odds of that happening? Anyhow, my hat is off to you. You must be, like, some kind of professional hero or something." "Well, you're welcome, I think. Sorry I didn't remember what happened." "Maybe it's better that way." "At the rate I'm going, I may not remember meeting you *this* time, either." "Beer for breakfast, huh? Well, listen, Fox, I think I've got a sandwich with your name on it." "What?" "Come eat lunch with us. My roommate packed way too much food and I'd love it if you'd help us out." "And we've got chocolate cookies," Gabriel adds, "And you can help me build a princess castle." It is impossible for me to figure out how, having set out to blow my head off, I could have ended up sitting here amidst the sand dunes with this beautiful woman and her child. But maybe Joy gave me the answer a few moments ago. Maybe this is meant to be, somehow. One thing is certain. If I stay with them, I'll stay alive. If I don't I'm certainly dead. FBI HEADQUARTERS, WASHINGTON, DC 10:56 AM "I need to see A.D. Skinner. Is he in?" Skinner's assistant, Kimberly, has never been very good at hiding her feelings. Sometimes I think she must be the most easily annoyed person in Washington. The most sour, as well. "Mr. Skinner is on a conference call and can't be disturbed." "Well, when can he be disturbed?" "They'll be breaking for lunch in an hour. I would be happy to give him a message." Happy? I seriously doubt that. Aloud, I say, "Please have him call me in my office. It's extremely urgent." Fighting the urge to commit violence, I watch as Kimberly's perfectly manicured fingers slowly pick up a pen, languidly locate a message pad, and carefully take down my message. "Your extension?" "2680." "Okay," she says primly, putting a neat check in the box marked "urgent" on the message pad. "I'll have him call." "Thank you." Freak. I spin on my heel and head for the door. "Agent Scully..." "Yes?" Turning back, I half-expect to be met with a put down or some kind of abuse. "This wouldn't be about Agent Mulder, would it?" "Why?" Something in Kimberly's tone gives me the creeping horrors. What does she know that I don't know? "Well, it's just that there was a message from Agent Mulder in Mr. Skinner's voice mail this morning...Mr. Skinner came in late and I haven't met with him yet to give him his messages...um, is there something wrong that we should know about?" Everything is wrong. My mouth goes dry. "What did Agent Mulder say?" "Well, not much, just that he was going to take a few days off. He said that he would be going out of town but didn't say where or leave a contact number. He sounded, well, funny." "Funny how?" "Well, just not normal, you know? I've still got the message. I always save them in case Mr. Skinner wants to hear them. Do you want to hear it?" In the future, I must remember to be nicer to Kimberly. "Yes, I really would. Thanks." She picks up the phone and punches in a series of numbers. Then she holds the receiver out to me. Mulder sounds incredibly tired. It is easy to hear he's not telling the truth. I hand the receiver back to Ellen. "Thanks. That was...helpful. The truth is, Kimberly, I'm not sure where Agent Mulder has gone but I need to find him. He's had a big shock in the last few days, a personal matter. I need Skinner's help. Please make sure he calls me." "I'll see if I can hurry Mr. Skinner along." "I'll be in my office." I begin to feel lost as I step from Skinner's office into the hallway. Now what? Mulder has been missing twelve, maybe fourteen hours at the outside. My conviction that he is bent on harming himself, however deep-seated, will not be enough to garner the help of any law enforcement agency. It is remotely possible that Walter Skinner can help me through unofficial channels, but in a situation like this his hands may be tied. In reality, my only option is to search for Mulder myself. BUXTON, NORTH CAROLINA SURF MOTEL PARKING LOT 2:55 PM When I asked for her phone number she gave it to me without hesitation. It's hard not to smile as I look down at the page she tore from Gabriel's coloring book. The name and number appear in red crayon, right above the purple Mickey Mouse Gabriel colored for me and just below a smear of peanut butter. I stick my gun under the front seat of my car. I don't know if I'm going to use it or not. I wonder if I have a toothbrush. I sort through the pile of crap in the trunk of my car. I have my wallet, of course; it contains a credit card, some cash and my Bureau ID. I have a toothbrush, but no razor, a spare pair of jeans, but no clean shirt. And thermal underwear. Well, that should be very useful. I pay for a beachfront room. It sports all the usual beach-theme crap and is chilled to sub-zero by a musty smelling air conditioner. This I turn off, opening the sliding glass door to let in fresh air and the sound of the ocean. I am sunburned and dehydrated. My body is throbbing and I am covered in sand. I leave my clothes on the terrace railing to dry. Rinsing the beach from my hair and my pores, I find myself wishing a lot of things. I wish I was still building castles with Gabriel, or lying on my back drinking beer in the sun. I wish I knew what I was doing here. I wish I could go home. I wish I could think about Scully without feeling this knot in the pit of my stomach. I wish I could hear her voice; it has always been what keeps me grounded. I have a decision to make. I wish she were here to help me figure it out. I'm watching myself sitting in the middle of a seashell print bedspread with the phone on the bed before me. I'm trying to get to her cell phone...so many numbers to dial. My arms hurt, I'm so tired. Why is her phone ringing so many times? When I was fifteen, I had a recurring nightmare of being pursued by a faceless enemy. In the dream, I find myself in front of a pay phone and stop running long enough to call my father, knowing this gives my pursuer time to catch up to me. I realize with terror that this is it, my only chance to get help. My father answers, "Hello?" "Dad it's Fox. Help me." "Hello? Who is this?" "Dad, it's me. Help me." "I can't hear you...who is this?" The enemy is coming closer. "Dad, help me. Please Dad, please help me." "Hello? Hello?" Wrenching terror. Scully's voice on the line. "This is Scully." I try to say it. "Scully, it's me." Nothing is coming out. My voice has gone dry. "Hello?" Scully, it's me. Help me. "Hello? Who is this?" I cannot speak. "Mulder, please don't hang up. Tell me where you are." I need air. Why am I so hot? I set the receiver back in the cradle. After a few minutes the phone rings. I let it and let it and let it. I unfold the picture that Gabriel Anne made for me and lie it flat on the bed. Gabriel saved my life this morning; she wasn't afraid to speak up. I admire her - so much courage for such a small person. I admire her mother, her generosity of spirit. Shit, as far as Joy knew I was nothing more than a random guy who came to the beach with no swimsuit and a six-pack of beer. But she took me in. She chose to trust me. If I were half as brave as they are, I would pick up the phone right now. I'm watching myself sitting. Sitting motionless on this bed while the wheel of the world turns afternoon to evening, turns me to stone, turns me cold as snow. I'm watching the rolling of icy tears down my cheeks, listening to the rolling of breakers that polish me until I'm smooth as marble. There is nothing else. This cold is all that's left. I'm watching myself getting dressed, going down the hall to the ice machine. I need ice. I don't remember why. I think it's a promise I made. I'm watching myself lie down on the bed with the ice bucket next to me. I plunge my hand into the ice. Jesus, it hurts. Why am I surprised? FBI HEADQUARTERS, 3:49 PM There is no one else it could have been. When the cell phone rang I was sitting at Mulder's desk, fruitlessly searching hospitals, police departments, and highway patrols in every state between the District and Massachusetts. The unfamiliar area code on the caller ID was the real tip off, but even before I noticed that, something told me who was calling. Please let it not be a payphone. "Good afternoon, Surf Motel." Surf Motel. My circulatory system resumes normal operations. "Hello, where are you located, please?" "We're on Highway 12, ma'am, in Buxton." "What state, please?" There is a pause while the desk clerk processes my question. "Uh, Buxton, North Carolina, ma'am. We're located on the Outer Banks...Hatteras Island." So Mulder has gone to the beach. Should I take that as a good sign or a bad one? "Can you connect me with Fox Mulder's room, please?" "One moment, please." There is a click, a pause, and then ringing. Mulder does not answer. "Mulder, in a minute I'm going to start smashing things, too." I say this a little too loudly, slamming the phone down. Don't panic, Dana. Keep it together. At least you know where to start looking. "Agent Scully." Skinner. I whirl to face him. "Sir." How weird for Skinner to come down here. He knows something's up. "Kimberly said you needed to see me. I'm sorry I couldn't come sooner." How to tell him? How much to tell him? "Sir, I need to take some time off. I need to go to North Carolina." "Agent Mulder asked for time off himself, just this morning." Skinner's eyebrows are lifted, silently questioning. As if Mulder and I had been plotting to ditch work together or something. If only it was that harmless. "I'm aware of that. Sir, I'd like to keep this off the record." "Go ahead." "Without going into too much detail about Agent Mulder's personal affairs... I'm afraid.... Sir, I feel very strongly that Mulder has suffered some kind of nervous collapse...I think he may intend to hurt himself." Skinner's jaw muscles work overtime as he turns the information over in his mind. After a long moment he says quietly, "Agent Scully, it goes without saying that I trust your judgment completely...if you believe that Mulder is a danger to himself that's enough for me. You can't tell me anything further, though, if you want me to keep this unofficial." "I know, sir. It's a conflict of interest...you'll have to send him for evaluation." I feel like Judas, but I find myself saying, "That may not be a bad thing." "Bad or good, his career could sit in the balance. I can't help you with this. But I can cover your ass while you deal with it." "I'll keep in touch." Skinner stalks out of my office, unable to hide his vexation. I watch him go with a sinking feeling. I don't want to do this alone. Nevertheless, I need to find Mulder now. I want to see his face so badly I think I could beam myself to North Carolina by the sheer force of my will. I take the 6:00 flight to Norfolk, my psyche teeming with doubts and uncertainties that pursue me like an angry mob as I rent a car and drive toward Nags Head. In my work at the FBI, I have learned that sometimes, like it or not, you have to accept the indefinable. In personal matters, however, I've stuck my head in the sand, so to speak, and ignored that lesson whenever possible. In my relationships, I need a degree of control. I can't tolerate the kind of gray areas that have become the routine in my professional life. Fox Mulder is one hell of a gray area. What do you want from me, Mulder? Do you need me to say I'm in love with you? I wish it could be that simple between us. It's not simple, though, and we both know it. I do have strong feelings for you, feelings I've expressed to you in the past. It is telling, though, that these revelations always seem to come spilling out at the worst possible times, always in situations where our words cannot lead to physical intimacy. That's my way of holding back from you, of avoiding what you have clearly wanted for so long. Last night you tried to force my hand. It's hard to admit, but I'm glad you did that. I couldn't handle it, though. I wish I knew why. I have always wanted to believe that our relationship is one that transcends the quagmire of normal human relations. Being in love, making love, making a life, having a home and children...I have fantasized about doing all those things with you, but those fantasies don't make me happy. I can't escape the feeling that that reality is not meant for us. It's for people who live in the daylight, people who are not consumed by darkness. So instead of exploring the possibilities, I nourish myself with unspoken feelings. It's far from a feast, but it keeps me going. You think I don't know how much pain you're in. You may even think I don't care. But Mulder, you reached for me and even though I let my fear get the best of me, I wanted to reach back. I should have stayed with you. I realize now that we can't run away. We've got to let this unfold. I'm ready to accept what has never been definable. I'm ready to acknowledge the truth I have denied. We'll figure out the rest when I know you are safe. End of Part Two Title - Dreaming Omega (3/7) Author - Spookey247 (Spookey247@msn.com) Derange and Disengage: Three BUXTON, NORTH CAROLINA 10:51 PM Jesus Fucking Christ. My jeans are soaked and the bed is soaked. It's the ice bucket, now melted, which turned over when I did. Thank god the fun never ends. The room is dark. I find the TV remote and flip to the program guide. It's almost eleven. Maybe I could get someone else to shoot me. I've got one of those four-star headaches that you can only get by mixing excessive drinking with way too much sun. When I sit up, the bed revolves slowly. Maybe I'll just die of thirst. I can't bring myself to turn on the bathroom light so I fumble in the darkness to unwrap a flimsy plastic cup. I gulp tap water greedily, tasting sulphur. Mental note: even the Black Oil tastes better than the water at the coast. The night air is cool as I cross the highway. The village seems deserted; tourist season has been over for weeks. The fluorescent light in the Handy Mart is painfully bright, but I locate what I need, pausing in the aisle to open a box of painkillers and drain a bottle of water. The guy behind the counter looks up from his magazine. "Dude...do you think you could pay for those first?" "Too late." I medicate myself and toss the empty Advil box and my credit card on the counter with some bottles of water. My stomach lurches dangerously. "You got any real food around here?" "Hot dogs and nachos back there." "Just what a body needs." I contemplate the glistening red wieners as they slowly revolve in their warmer. Normally, I'll eat anything without complaining. There's no use being picky in my line of work. I really have to wonder, though, if this is a good idea. "I've got just one word for you," a voice says softly, right in my ear. "Sal-mo-nel-la." Joy is standing next to me holding a twelve-pack of Budweiser under her arm. Her presence is like a magic tonic; I can feel my shoulders drop an inch just looking at her face. "I think I was deciding against it." "You're fried." She reaches out and pokes me in the bicep. "In more ways than one." "Did you get a room?" Our eyes meet. It takes a moment to find my voice. "Uh, yeah, I took your advice." I point across the highway. "You were right, it is very clean." Joy looks like she's about to burst out laughing. I can tell she hates small talk as much as I do. My desire to end this lame conversation gets the better of my shyness and I find myself saying, "Um, I was going to call you but I fell asleep...I guess I was kind of drunk. Again." "Yeah, you were." She's still smiling like the cat with the canary so I just keep rolling before I have a chance to stop myself. "I was going to ask if you wanted to have a drink with me." She doesn't attempt to hide her pleasure at my proposal. "I'd love to. But I can't." I don't answer so she continues, "Tessa and I have got some friends over tonight. Monday's our night off and we usually play poker. We just live a couple of blocks from here...walking distance." "Okay..." "Do you like shrimp?" "Sure. To tell the truth, right now I like anything that's not still moving." "Me and Tess cooked. Once you get to know me you'll see what a miracle that is. You wouldn't want to miss it cause it may be a one time event. Want to come over?" Okay, let me puzzle this one out. Should I return to the immaculately decorated Surf Motel to sit in the gloom resisting the lure of the gun in my car, or should I follow this lovely creature home and spend a few hours getting to know her? "Sure," I say, feeling lighter by the instant, "But I've got just one word for you." "What's that?" "Pisswater." I take the case of Budweiser and put it back in the cooler. "That was two words." "Not necessarily." I pull out two sixes of an expensive micro-brew. "Do you drink stuff like this?" "Sure, I'll drink it." She frowns at me sternly. "But let me tell you, son, at my house we don't go in for all that high-brow crap." There's a gleam in her eye and a teasing grin; I wonder if Joy is ever serious about anything. "I'll try to keep that in mind." "You're in the south now, yankee boy." "Yes ma'am. I hear you." "If you don't look out you might go all native and actually drink beer from a can." SOMEWHERE ON NC 12, HATTERAS ISLAND 10:57 PM I know everyone loves the Outer Banks, but tonight I can't imagine any place being beautiful enough to justify what I have just been through. Getting out of Norfolk was hell and navigating through Newport News was hell, but the highway from Newport News to Kitty Hawk was more like purgatory, with multiple slowdowns and a traffic jam that went on for what seemed like hours. A drive I expected to make in two hours stretched out to three. When I arrived in Kitty Hawk, sleepy and hungry and ready to kill someone, I found out that Buxton, on the next island south, was at least thirty minutes further on. Fortunately, the traffic through Nags Head wasn't bad, thinning to almost nothing once I crossed the bridge to Hatteras. The tiny coastal villages consist of small businesses and scattered houses. They tend to roll by without making much of an impression, so I have to consider it a lucky break when I notice the small sign that tells me I have arrived in Buxton. I can't keep my eyes open any longer. About five miles back I had a bona fide hallucination: a herd of butterflies crossed the highway in the darkness ahead of me. The illusion lasted only a split second, but the effect was realistic enough to make me slam on my brakes, leaving me feeling slightly idiotic. I need coffee. I slow down to pull into a convenience store and then something makes me glance to the left, instead. Surf Motel. I can feel him. He's near. The coffee can wait. A middle-aged woman sits behind the desk in the lobby. She is watching a news program and I have to speak to get her attention. "Excuse me." "Oh, gosh, I'm sorry." The woman's face is friendly as she swings around in her chair. "Do you have a reservation?" "No, actually, I'm looking for someone. Can you tell me which room is Fox Mulder's?" "Well, now, let me see. 109. That's just down that hall there." The worn beige walls with their many doors are a blur and I am trying hard not to run. I knock on the door. I am willing him to be inside, unharmed. I knock again, refusing to believe that he is not within. By the third knock I feel deflated. It's going to be a long night. Back at the front desk, I try despite my disappointment to seem nonchalant. "My friend didn't answer, but his car is in the parking lot. You haven't seen him in the last hour or so, have you?" "What is his name again?" "Fox Mulder. He's tall, with bbrown hair. The Honda in the parking lot is his." "Oh, he was that nice looking young man that came in this afternoon. I remember him very clearly, interesting name. But I've been busy in the office. I haven't seen him since I checked him in. He's probably taking a walk on the beach." I can't afford to assume anything like that. I flip out my FBI credentials. "Ma'am, I need to ask you to open the door to room 109." "Oh my. Is the fellow dangerous? Should we call the sheriff?" "No, it's not anything like that. He's my partner and he's been missing. I need to make sure that he's not in that room." Looking disturbed, the woman takes a key ring and I follow her back down the hall. A quick check of room 109 reveals nothing but Mulder's dirty laundry and rumpled bed. On the off chance that he may have left his gun for safe keeping, I open drawers and check under the bed, but I come up empty, of course. I don't know why I thought I would find it. I push open the door to the terrace and slog toward the beach, my shoes filling with sand. The beach seems enormous; the sky even bigger. The water is dark and full of foreboding. I could walk for hours and have no chance of finding him. Why did I feel his presence so urgently? All at once I'm paper-thin and the wind rustles my bones like dry leaves. I *can* feel him. I can. I see his form phosphorescent near the water, which isn't really water but a suggestion of water, ghostly in this place of shipwrecks and tragedy. I see his form translucent, stepping into a bright light and disappearing. I know something now in my bones, my Bones, which have become so fragile...he can't wait anymore, he's got to have the answer he has sought so long. Nothing else matters to him now. Mulder is a seeker and so I have become a seeker, too. The trail has gone cold here on the earth. He wants to look for it somewhere else. I want to follow him, as I always have. I want to follow. End of Part Three Title - Dreaming Omega (4/7) Author - Spookey247 (Spookey247@msn.com) Straw Dogs and Static: One 17-B BUXTON COVE DRIVE 1:30 AM "Okay, this one is five card draw, ante up." I dig in my pocket but my quarters are long gone. "I'm busted. Where's the change machine?" Emily is a vixen, around twenty-five with a Mediterranean complexion, jet-black hair, and exotic almond shaped eyes. "It's your lucky day, Fox," she tells me in a lascivious stage whisper. "I'm winning, so I'll help you out. But it's gonna cost you later." She slides me four quarters and winks. It's hard to keep my mind on my cards. She's sitting so close we're sharing body heat. "I think my luck is improving." "You think she's kidding. In another hour you'll have to beat her off with a stick." This comes from Pete, who I met on the beach earlier today. He is a small, shifty man in his early thirties, slight of build, with a dark beard and a ponytail. "Pete." Pete's girlfriend, Tessa, with a body as round as Pete's is lean, kicks him under the table. "That was *so* uncalled-for." "Yeah, Pete." Emily pretends to be hurt. She turns to me with a sarcastic smirk. "Pete's a little bitter, can you tell?" Joy holds the deck and now she snorts with impatience. "Are you guys finished? Leave Fox alone. Like he would even be interested in your little squabble. This is five-card draw unless we've decided on group therapy instead of poker." I am sitting at a big, square table with a bunch of total strangers. The table occupies much of the available space in the living room of an upstairs apartment near the Pamlico Sound. Since I got here two hours ago, I've been fleeced to the tune of ten bucks, this amount lost bit by bit in nickels, dimes, and quarters. It's humiliating, in a way, but then I haven't done this since college. I'm also drunk. Third time today. Unprecedented. My hostess for the evening is the ringleader in this shakedown. It's embarrassing, but once again I catch myself staring at Joy - it's been happening all night. It started in the Handy Mart, when I kept getting lost in her wide, honest face with its large green eyes and expression of perpetual wonder. All evening I've been sitting just to her left at the table, which means I have to invent excuses to look her way. I've tried to seem nonchalant, not to broadcast my admiration of the conspicuous lack of make-up on her gold-brown skin, of her hair in braids the color of honey and the way her faded cotton dress moves with the curves of her long body. Her mind is bright and open, and I find that I crave her attention; I am shut inside myself and with every glance she pulls me out into fresh air, challenging me to wake up, pay attention, and enjoy. Now she catches my eye as she deals the last of the hand and gives me a smile. She's amazing. God, she really is. Joy's friends are a lot like her, easygoing and funny, kind and unassuming. No one seems interested in who I am or what I'm doing at this party. They all work together at a bar in Nags Head, so I guess they're used to drinking with strangers. Maybe when your town is always full of tourists you just give up worrying about who people are. It's hard to believe I could be sitting here, completely wasted, soaking in scatological humor and speculation about the sex lives of people I don't know, when it was only last night that I chose to forsake the depravity, deceit, and inhumanity of my dark and twisted life. It's a stunning reality check: while I was clawing through webs of lies in full expectation of a violent death, others were enjoying regular hours, the comfort of friends and family, and night after night of sound sleep. Surrounded by the steady, gentle energy of this humble card game, to have lived such a life now seems both absurd and unfair. How could I not have seen that? Looking around me, I realize that these people aren't thinking beyond their next beer. I have never been able to choose this, the simple enjoyment of a moment. I lost that choice the night they took Samantha. This revelation is like a kick in the guts. I wash down the pain with another swallow of beer. "Fives and nines takes the hand. Looks like it's you, Mulder." I rake in my first pot of the evening and push four quarters across the table to Emily. "Here ya go." "No, you keep 'em." Pete speaks up, "Em would always rather take it out in trade. Holy Fuck, stop it, Tess." "I need a cigarette." Speaking now is Joy's younger brother, CJ. He is tall and broad-shouldered,bearing a strong resemblance to his sister in both appearance and temperament. Everyone gets up, stretching their legs, finding their cigarettes. "What time is it?" asks Tessa. CJ checks his watch. "Twenty 'til two." "Do we need more beer?" "Always." Tessa grabs her bag. "C'mon Pete." When I go to the kitchen for another beer, Joy and Emily are huddled over the kitchen sink in an animated conversation that stops abruptly as I come through the door. "Caught us." Emily says brightly. "Doing what?" "Talkin' boutcha." Emily heads for the living room, pausing in the kitchen door and brazenly running her finger down the center of my chest. For a moment her dark eyes stare into mine, then she smiles like it's all a joke and sticks her head into the living room. "Hey, where'd everybody go?" "I think they went for more beer." "More beer? God, Fox is gonna think we're a bunch of fucking lushes." She exchanges a look with Joy and leaves the room. "Think we're a bunch of drunks, Fox?" I open the refrigerator and get a beer. "Cheers." "Get me one, too." "So you were talking about me, huh?" "Mm-hmm." "All good, I hope." I open the beers and hand her one. "Emily seems to be a very friendly person." I say this with an ironic lift of my eyebrow, and Joy bursts out laughing. "Yes, she's very friendly." "I don't know what she's after." "Oh, c'mon, Fox." She punches me playfully. "All the usual things, I bet. She thinks you're sweet. You've got a brain in your head and a real life, unlike most of the male population around here." "Shit, there's nothing sweet about me." I am loose, like a poorly tied knot. Joy is watching me with a mixture of amusement and arousal that is truly disconcerting. Visions of wiping that smirk off her face are cascading through my mind. I could take her right now. I could take her for my own. It might be a good idea to change the subject. I look around the kitchen. Hanging above the table is a framed black and white photograph. It shows a nude woman with a shaved head sitting in profile against a stark white background. There is something about the lighting, or maybe it's the shape of the woman's head...it is a singular image, ominous and grotesque. "That's an interesting picture." Joy smiles. "That one?" "Yeah...that woman looks like she just came down from outer space." "Hmm. That's a new one on me. I'll take it as a compliment. Thanks." "You took that?" "Yep. Before I came here, I worked for an agency in New York ... I've got stuff in a gallery in Soho, too, but since I've now shunned the center of the universe I'm sure it won't last. Want to see some more?" "Yes, definitely." We go to a computer in her bedroom and Joy begins pulling up files. The tour through her portfolio is like a window to her world-view; realities meet edge to edge, perspectives purl like floodwater. She likes to work in black and white - the style understated and surreal, even when the subject of the photograph is a fashion model or a bottle of cologne. She's drawn to things off-center and unspoken, things from other worlds. Sitting next to Joy at her desk, I look around her bedroom with its jumble of worldly possessions. The bookshelf is crammed to bursting with worn-out paperbacks, seashells, stones, and bird nests. A pink bicycle leans carelessly near the door. About a hundred shoes spill out of her closet like a pile of treasure and origami birds fly near the ceiling amidst Chinese paper lanterns. A concrete statue of the laughing Buddha sits at the foot of her bed, decorated with dried flowers and quartz crystals; it is accompanied by an inflatable green alien that leans against it like a drunk posing for a snapshot. I am nearly insensible, profoundly aroused by the sweet smell hovering around her body. I lean in close, breathing deeply, resisting the urge to taste her long neck. "What kind of perfume are you wearing?" I whisper, my head close to hers. The lines on the computer screen are getting blurry. God, am I making a move on her? I want to. I really do. She turns to face me. Her eyes, oh god. That smell...rich and spicy. Her lips, full and soft, moving to tell me, "That's Jasmine, Fox." Whoa, Mulder, get a grip. "I like it." "Good." Her hand on my knee. It's almost impossible to hold myself back. The screen door slams. Someone's come back inside. I return my attention to the computer screen, forced back into conversation when all I want to do is get up and shut the bedroom door. There's a photo on the computer screen of a naked man in a city park. It is riveting; he is pre-historic, bestial, covered in leaves and mud, crouching wildly while onlookers stare in disbelief. "You must have had to do some fast talking to get that guy to pose that way." She laughs. "It was cold that day, too. But I didn't really give him any choice." "I don't see a gun to his head." "That's my husband. I believe you've been introduced." "Your ex-husband, right?" "Yes. Actually, the only reason I'm here is to get away from him." "But you didn't get away." "Yeah, that's the pisser. He can't take a hint. But then, he's neither stable nor smart." "He's the best argument for mercy killing that I can think of," a voice says behind us. CJ's massive frame fills the bedroom door. He is staring down at us with an appropriate degree of brotherly menace. Joy looks at him fondly. "You better smile when you say that, Mister." CJ shoves his hands in his pockets and leans against the door. "The motherfucker followed her here just so he can keep hassling her. We call the cops if we even see him." Joy nods, looking sad. "Brian's a drummer, which if you know any drummers, should explain a lot. All his friends are junkies and he's not strong enough to just say no. But he's not all bad. He'll get it together." "I hate it when you stick up for him." CJ says tightly, the corners of his mouth turning down. "Did she tell you he beat her up? Now he's stalking her. She needs to get a restraining order but she won't." "God, CJ. Give it a rest. This is *not* CNN." "You trust people too much, Joy." Joy shuts her eyes. When she opens them, they have become patient again. "Can we please talk about something else?" "Okay." The tone of her voice quells CJ's anger and he drops into a chair near the bed. "I think I might go for a swim. What about you guys? Feel like a swim?" "Isn't it kind of cold tonight?" Joy looks at me. "What do you think?" "I think I will not feel the cold," I answer, feigning bravado to ease the tension and hoisting my beer. This gets a laugh, but they don't know. I really won't feel the cold. I won't feel anything. The smell of jasmine reminds me that's not true. The phone rings and Joy goes into the living room to pick up. Emily comes in from the driveway with Kyle, Tessa's sister, and they both recline on Joy's bed. In the next room, we hear Joy's voice drop low. "Who is this?" She is silent for a moment, then slams the receiver down. "Goddamm. Brian Cahill could never fuck himself deep enough to suit me." "Do you think that was him?" CJ calls to her. "I picked up another call like that while you were at the store." Joy returns to the bedroom door, picking in frustration at a scrap of loose paint on the frame. "Yeah, I think he's been trying to call all day. He doesn't say anything. He's just trying to fuck with my head. It's no big deal." "That's it, Joy. If he comes down here again I'm gonna kick his ass." The screen door slams again. It's Pete and Tessa, back from their beer run. Tessa joins us in Joy's bedroom. "We're going swimming," Joy tells her. "Want to go?" "No way." Tessa shivers. "Jesus, it's windy tonight. You guys can freeze your ass if you want. I'll stay here." "Mama?" Gabriel squints in the light and runs to Joy, whimpering. Joy gathers her up and sits on the bed, and in no time at all she is sound asleep again. "I didn't know she was here. She must be a very heavy sleeper." "Yeah," Joy answers with a sigh, "she's learned to sleep through a lot of things." Joy sits on the bed in half-lotus. I cannot tear my eyes away. Her anger seems to have cooled as quickly as it came and now she looks content and slightly sleepy. She regards me with tenderness while her daughter sleeps in her arms. What if I could take Gabriel from her mother and carry her, like a doting father, to her bed? What if I could return to Joy, join my body to hers, and sleep peacefully for hours in the warmth of her arms? "I'll take her, Joy, if you still want to go," Tessa offers. "No, that's okay. I think I'm kind of ready to wind down." Joy is speaking to her roommate, but she's not looking at Tessa or any of her friends. She's looking at me. She is inviting me into that fantasy. I ache to join her there. CJ shakes me out of my reverie. His voice is intense. "You coming, Mulder?" I think he might not want me near his sister. That's understandable. What the hell am I thinking, anyway? Joy is an innocent; she and her daughter are pure, like a pair of angels. Whatever hardships they have known pale in comparison to the darkness that I could bring to their lives. I don't know how to return what Joy is offering me. I need to walk away from this. "Dude." CJ puts his hand on my shoulder. "You coming?" I get the message loud and clear. "Yeah. Yeah, let's go." SURF MOTEL PARKING LOT 1:50 AM Mulder's car is locked and the windows are rolled up tight. Flashlight in hand, I am hoping for a glimpse of anything that might give me a clue as to his intentions. The back seat is empty except for the eternal pile of files and books that travels with Mulder wherever he goes. The front seat does not contain so much as an empty coffee cup. I play my light down onto the floor of the passenger side, and then onto the floor of the driver's side, craning my neck for a better view. What's that? A dull gleam of metal is visible, jutting out from under the driver's seat. His gun. The gun is here the gun is here the gun is here... Wherever Mulder is, at least I know he's not shooting himself. I breathe out slowly. Maybe I'm being a little too paranoid. Maybe it's going to be all right. I park my car where I can see both the entrance to the lobby and the side entrance that leads out to the beach. He's bound to come back sooner or later. The waiting is hard. I make careful circles in my coffee with a wooden stirrer. There's no need to stir, but the motion keeps the steam from the cup wafting towards my face, the smell of the coffee reminding me to stay awake. Not that I could rest anyway. My watch tells me that it's nearly 2:00. A knot of frustration that has been growing all day settles painfully in the center of my chest. He's not coming back here. Where would Mulder go, on foot, in a little beach town on a deserted weeknight? There are only two possibilities: He is either on the beach or in a bar. If he's on the beach there is nothing I can do but continue waiting. To look for bars I'll have to leave my post. Is it worth it? It's better than sitting here losing my mind. SOMEWHERE NEAR THE CORNER OF NC 12 AND BUXTON COVE DRIVE 2:05 AM "Tessa's right. It's windy tonight." Faint stars show beyond security lights and street lamps. I feel like a teenager out past curfew, skulking drunk down a tidy residential street while the rest of the world sleeps. Emily walks close beside me. CJ and Pete have gone ahead. Occasionally we hear them laugh or shout into the night. I have a raging feeling in my loinss that won't leave me alone. Normally alcohol has the opposite effect on my libido, but god, I wanted her...my hormones are working overtime. Emily is not helping things much either. She keeps leaning close to me, making sure her bare shoulder brushes mine as we walk along. I couldn't feel less in control of myself. "Joy says you're from DC." "Yes, that's true." "What do you do there?" I'm getting the feeling that this small talk is just a formality. Emily sways as she walks, her hips and her ass undulating like a ship at sea. "What do I do? Well ...I work for the government." "Wow. I never knew anybody with an actual job...well, except for my dad, I guess." There's a little ice water on the old sex drive. She continues, "I lived in DC for a while about a year ago. I worked for a big club in Arlington. Capone's, ever been there?" Uh, waiter, hold the ice water. I do remember that bar. It features entertainment of the topless variety. "I may have been there once or twice," I answer. "Yeah? Do you like the bar scene, Fox?" "Uh, sure. I guess." "I've been dancing since I turned eighteen. My sister dances, too, and when I was like, sixteen, she used to sneak me into the bar in Miami where she worked...I loved it, the way the guys looked at her. I mean, she'd put her body right in front of their faces and there was nothing they could do about it, you know? They couldn't touch her. All they could do was dream. And some of them hated that and acted like bastards, but some of them loved it...mostly the business class, the guys with lots of money. I could tell they liked giving it up for a beautiful woman...letting her do the driving, so to speak. I think it's what lots of guys secretly want." We stop walking for a moment. She's looking at me hungrily, her intentions transparent, her expression loose and pliant from drinking. "Are you one of those guys, Fox?" I don't answer her. I *am* one of those guys, of course, trapped in my own dysfunction, substituting voyeurism for human affection and helpless to do anything about it, but I'll be goddammed if I'm going to admit it to Emily. A few minutes ago I was feeling ashamed of the thoughts I was having. Emily had come across as nothing more than a very horny and very naive kid. Now that we're alone, that image is rapidly going up in smoke. She's far more sophisticated than she looks, and she's teasing me, playing a game. She's in her element; she thinks it's fun to taunt me. Well, Mulder, you've spent your life beating off to women like this, and now you've got your chance to make good. Isn't this what you've always wanted? It's all that I deserve. She lets her body brush against mine in that maddening way. "I work in a club near Norfolk on the weekends. It's a horrible drive, but I hate that area and I don't want to live there, so I just stay with one of the other dancers and come home Monday morning. You can't beat the money in Norfolk, though. There are sailors everywhere." We cross the highway and start across the parking lot of the Surf Motel. I see Pete and CJ disappearing around the corner of the motel's main building, headed for the beach behind it. Emily follows them slowly, but I find myself hanging back, trailing behind her. She stops; waits for me; takes my arm when I catch up, red-tipped fingers making trails on my shoulder. "Fox, have you ever gone swimming in the ocean at night?" Her voice is sultry, the come-on impossible to ignore. "It's awesome, like when the tide is out and the water's really calm..." Suddenly I feel witless, like a steer being led to slaughter. "Yeah, yeah. I grew up near the ocean." I follow Emily onto the beach. "We have a spot where we always swim late at night," she calls over the wind. "No one will bother us." No one will bother us. That's a really good thing. I can hear CJ and Pete. The moon is nearly full tonight and I can see their silhouettes far out in the water. We walk past them, though, until the lights of the motel are remote, arriving at a bend in the beach where the maritime forest dips close to the water. She leads me toward the trees, to a sheltered spot, out of the wind, where she stops and turns toward me, giving me a come-hither stare and pulling her thin cotton dress over her head. As she sheds the white undershirt and panties that lie underneath, my mouth drops open at the sight of her body. She is voluptuous, inviting, tanned skin glowing in the moonlight as she holds a hand out to welcome me. "Come here," she purrs. "I want to show you something." I approach her, transfixed, and she takes both my hands and puts them to her breasts, which are obscenely round and firm. Both nipples are pierced through with silver rings. "What do you think?" she whispers. I am speechless. "How about this?" she breathes, sliding one of my hands toward her pubis until I can feel how bare and smooth she is...hairless flesh, naked under my touch. Holy Shit. I close my eyes and turn away, blood boiling. Emily's hands run up my back, coming to rest on my shoulders. She pulls at my shirt. "Take it off." That's funny. She's giving orders now. She thinks she's in charge of this situation, but she doesn't know what she's getting herself into. I don't give a damn who she is or what she wants. I'm inhuman with lust, ready to satisfy myself. "These, too, big guy." Her hands slide down to unbutton my jeans. "Let's see what's under those 501s." Who the fuck does she think she is? I spin toward her, catching her by the wrists, ripping her hands away from my body and holding them tight in the air. "You know, Emily, Pete was right about you." I'm expecting this to make her mad, but instead she starts laughing. "Pete is an asshole but he doesn't lie. Lighten up, Fox. Did we come here to swim or what?" I remove my clothes. Emily backs toward the water, crooking her finger for me to follow, and I do, wading in after her until the breakers are hitting my knees. She beckons me on and I move to take her, reaching out to pull her body close to mine. The next thing I know, I am laying on my back spitting sea water. Giggling, Emily throws herself on top of me, pulling me to a sitting position and wrapping her legs around my waist, sitting on my legs and effectively pinning me to the sand below. A whitecap breaks over our heads. "Why the fuck did you push me like that?" I shout over the din of the waves. "You were getting cocky," she calls back, "You should have been paying attention." Who *is* doing the driving here? I force my mouth to hers, but she's got the upper hand; she's on top. I'm drunk and off-balance. One wrong move and I'm back under the water. She grabs my wrists and pulls my arms to my sides; now she is the only thing holding me up. Christ, she's going to drown me. Her voice is a dream inside my head. "Be a good boy, Fox, be still, let me touch you." I submit. I don't know what else to do. Now her fingers wrap around my cock like steel bands. With a smooth, brutal motion she strokes me from root to tip, reaching with her other hand to pull my head toward hers. The kiss is forceful and urgent. She seizes my bottom lip between her teeth and holds me captive as she strokes me up and down, taking me roughly as if there is no question that I am hers, like it's a done deal. It's almost painful, the way she is touching me. My knees are locking and my legs are getting numb. All at once she shifts, upsetting my precarious balance and forcing me under the water once more. But I can feel how shallow the water has become; there's sand under my back; we've been washed into shore. I crawl backwards into the shallowest water, gasping for breath. She pursues. What the hell am I doing, running from a woman this way? God, she looks incredible, like some kind of moonlit Siren with streams of water running from her body and her hair, and eyes that are commanding and wild. I am frozen in place and she is crawling toward me, over me, the silver nipple rings cold against my chest. Our kiss is coarse and savage. It's all business, but the truth is I have never been so aroused. I am watching myself lie back in the sand, watching how she pins my arms above my head as she kisses me. I am watching as she descends, drinking the Atlantic off my body, pushing my legs apart to nestle between them, taking me in her mouth. Jeeesuuuusssssss... She devours me cruelly, pulling me into the back of her throat, pausing to run her tongue up and down the length of my cock, gliding to the tip to rub the head back and forth across her lips and tongue. She's teasing me with her teeth, small sharp bites that send ripples of pain down my legs and up my spine. I lose track of time; she owns me completely. Now the waves begin, I'm nearly there. Oh shit, why is she stopping? I'm in pain; I need relief. "Hey, I'm really close." "I know. Tell me what you want, Fox." I can barely speak. "Let me come in your mouth." "Say 'please'." She's stroking me again...exasperating; infuriating; so fucking good. "Please..." "Please what?" "Please let me come in your mouth." "You like to say that, don't you, Fox." "Yesssss." "Say it again, then." "Please let me come in your mouth..." "In my mouth?" "Yessss." "I don't think so." Her hand pumps faster, I can't quit moving, I'm whimpering like a baby, out of control, out of control... She takes her hand away. My body is on fire; my balls feel like grapefruits. I double over with pain and frustration. "Jesus Christ, what are you doing?" Emily stands up. She stands over me like an exotic Colossus. Did I just hear her laugh? "*Suffer.*," she says with contempt. Holy shit, can this be happening? What did I do to piss her off? "Get up," she orders, but I can't and she knows it. Why does she think this is funny? "I didn't think you could," she sneers. Something cold and wet strikes my face. It's sand. She just kicked sand in my face. When I get up that bitch is *dead.* Suddenly, carried on the wind, we hear a voice. A thin and desperate voice coming from the direction of the motel. Coming closer as if the owner of the voice was running. "CJ! CJ! Pete! Guys, where are you?" Voices answer. I can see them come up out of the surf a hundred feet or so down the beach. A female form, obviously excited, shouts to them. It's Kyle, Tessa's sister. Something is wrong. "What's wrong with Kyle?" Emily asks, running for her clothes. I heave myself up off the sand with difficulty and force my legs to function. I pull on my jeans, which is no small feat considering how wet and sandy I am, grab my shoes and shirt and run toward the commotion. "...he's got a gun and he's threatening to take Gabriel but Joy won't let him in the house. They're in the driveway...oh my god he's so drunk..." Kyle is in tears. CJ and Pete are dressing, pulling on their shoes. "What's going on?" "It's Joy's husband. Man, he's pulled some shit before but never anything like this." CJ looks shaken. "I didn't even know he had a gun..." Pete finishes tying his shoelaces and hops up, nervous, "What the fuck are we gonna do?" "Kyle, call 911." I run toward the motel. CJ and Pete follow. It's hard running in the sand and we are all breathing hard by the time we reach the parking lot. There's something I need. I unlock my car and grab my gun from under the front seat. I turn to find them openmouthed. "Dude, if you kill his ass, you would be doing us all a big favor." End of Part Four Title - Dreaming Omega (5/7) Author - Spookey247 (spookey247@msn.com) Straw Dogs and Static: Two COMFORT INN PARKING LOT, BUXTON, NC 2:11 AM I now know that exactly two establishments serve alcohol in Buxton, NC on a Monday night. No bartender or waitress at either can claim to have seen someone fitting Mulder's description during the evening. Sitting in my car in the parking lot of the Comfort Inn, I am confounded and tired and thoroughly miserable. I have no idea where to go next. My cell phone rings. I check the number on the caller ID. Damn. It's only Skinner. "Having any luck, Agent Scully?" Concern hides under the surface of the nonchalance in Skinner's voice. "Where are you?" "I'm in Buxton, North Carolina, at the Outer Banks, and no, I'm not having much luck." I am pleased to have an opportunity to vent. "Mulder checked into a motel here...I've been to his room but he's not in it...his car is there, though, and I can see that his gun is inside. Sir, I just can't figure out where he's gone. There's no one here, the town's pretty deserted. It shouldn't be this hard to locate him." "Is he on the beach somewhere?" "There's no way to tell until the sun comes up...I..." I remember my vision of Mulder disappearing into the sky and cannot help but shudder, my mind filling with other images I'd rather not entertain. "Have you contacted the local PD?" "No...I was hoping to resolve this without setting off any alarms." "Scully, I think you should take that step. You can't be everywhere at once. They can at least keep an eye out for him." "You're right." "Keep me posted." "I will, sir." The local Police Department. Well, the Sheriff's office was not hard to miss. The small municipal center was brightly lit and shiny, obviously the newest building in town. The office of the Dare County Sheriff is as deserted as the rest of the village, almost totally silent. A lone dispatcher sits behind a desk reading a paperback. She looks up with surprise when I enter. "May I help you?" I show my badge and explain myself. As the dispatcher gets the forms necessary to fill out a missing persons report, the phone rings. She takes the 911 call about a domestic dispute and radios for a car to check things out. She then returns with a smile. "Sorry about that. Big Monday night. We only have two Deputies on duty down this way and that's the second call in half an hour. Old lady with a heart attack down in Frisco, guy threatening his wife up here in Buxton. And now you. We hardly ever have anything on Monday. I'm missing my beauty rest. Now what's your friend's name?" As I give out the information, I try hard not to sound as stressed as I feel. I hope Mulder will not give the Dare County Sheriff any more business on this busy Monday night. BUXTON COVE DRIVE 3:09 AM I can hear them arguing on the next block down. The angry clamor buzzes down the quiet street like a swarm of bees, sounding more violent as we draw closer. Brian Cahill stands deadly still with his legs planted wide in Joy's driveway, a handgun dangling from a meaty fist. I can't see his face, only a huge maass of blond dreadlocks and atattooed back that would not be out of place in pro wrestling. Joy stands blocking the way to her apartment. Her expression is primitive and murderous, the skin of her face stretched tight with fear and anger. She is shouting as if the force of her voice could be enough to keep her husband at bay. "I already told you, Brian. Even if it wasn't the goddamn middle of the night I wouldn't let you take her anywhere." It becomes clear just how drunk Cahill is when he speaks. "You wouldn't 'let me.' That's really funny, Joy," he slurs. "'Cause I got a gun and you don't." "You think you're a big man, now, don't you. You spineless shit. Get the fuck out of my driveway." "Don't push me, Joy. I want what's mine." "You won't shoot me. You can go straight to..." The gun comes up. Before I can tell Cahill to freeze, CJ darts from behind me, slamming into his brother-in-law, taking him off guard and very nearly taking him down. CJ's let his hatred get the best of him, he means to make good on his promise to kick this guy's ass. I shout, "Dammit, man, I had him cold!" But now we've lost our chance for an easy end to the situation. Pete dives into the fray, wrapping himself around Cahill's legs, trying to pull him down. CJ has Cahill in a death grip, one arm wrapped around Cahill's chest while the other grabs for the gun, which swings wildly as they struggle. That gun is bound to be loaded. Something's got to be done. I stick my own gun in the back of my jeans and lunge forward to break up the fight before Cahill's gun has a chance to go off. I hear Joy telling Tessa to go inside and lock the door, then she's screaming, "Stop it, guys, c'mon! Brian, goddammit this is so stupid, somebody's gonna get hurt, will you all just stop it!" I grab Cahill by the neck, trying to pull him down into a headlock, but the guy is enraged, psychotic, and even bigger than he looks. His strength is astonishing. He reaches up and grabs my injured hand, twisting hard. A jolt of liquid agony shoots up my arm, taking me to my knees, paralyzing my entire body. Pete loses his grip on Cahill, who takes his opportunity and kicks me in the head. I go down face first into the driveway. For a few seconds everything seems far away. Joy is screaming, screaming for her husband to give up, for someone to get the gun before the cops show, for all of us to please just stop it, stop it right now. Cahill is wailing. "Joy...help me, honey, get them off me. Joy!" He wants *her* to help him. He wants *her* to save him. Something must be wrong with my ears. "Don't let them fucking do this to me, Joy..." He thinks she's just a shadow, existing to serve only him. The air is violet, indigo, amber. My soul fades. I can't feel the rage but it fills my heart, cold as rocket fuel. He hurts her to show her she's nothing. He rapes her and calls it love. I am a sledgehammer made of stone. Joy is screaming. She doesn't understand, but I know what I'm doing. I'm setting her free. I smash Cahill's wrist on my knee and fling the gun aside. CJ holds him fast; we are one in purpose. It's a blur now, Cahill's body twitching under my fists - I need to feel his life slide out into my hands so that I can release it to the air like a bird. When it flies, she'll be free. When he dies, I'll be free. "Fox, please." Joy's voice is low and desperate. Her hands beg me to stop as she lays them on my shoulders, always hands on my shoulders, their hands on my shoulders, obscene and ruthless - cajoling, compelling, coercing...I spin to face her like a vicious dog, ready to settle things once and for all. "Fox, please, *stop*." Joy takes hold of the fist that is poised to strike her. My vision settles like heat over a desert highway. I can hear a siren in the distance. "Fox, stop and think." She lowers my arm to my side. "You don't have to do this." My breath is coming in spasms. Cahill strains against CJ's grip, threatening further mayhem despite the blood streaming from his nose and lower lip. I whirl to face him, pulling my gun from my jeans and my wallet from my hip pocket. "Federal Agent. You're under arrest." "Oh my god," Joy murmurs. This is a development I'm sure she could not have foreseen. CJ's eyes are huge. "You're a cop?" So I'm the fox in the hen house, it seems. Suddenly all the energy goes out of Cahill's body. He begins to weep like a child. "What the fuck, Cahill..." CJ gives him a shake. "Yeah, you pathetic motherfucker, be a man. Shut up." Pete says, standing nearby. Joy draws close to her husband, shaking noticeably. "Whatever happens, Brian, I don't want to see you again until you can act like a human being. Go home, pack your things, and go back to New York." "I need to see Gabe." "You're no good to her. She's better off without you. Now get out of here." Joy turns to me, tears in her eyes. "Please let him go." "Joy..." CJ's face twists in anger. "This is not smart. Mulder, tell her." "Joy, he's right. He threatened your life." "I love you, Joy, I love you, Joy, I love you, I love you, I love you ..." Cahill blubbers drunkenly, disintegrating into a mass of self-reproach, doubling over and covering his face with his hands. Joy's expression is penetrating and grim. "Fox, if you could please just look the other way on this, I'd take it as a personal favor." She doesn't want to be protected. All she wants is some control. I have to respect that; I have to respect her decision. I lower my gun. Suddenly, I'm shaking, too. "Get a restraining order." I'm not asking. This is my condition. "I'll let him go tonight. Tomorrow you'll get a restraining order." "Okay. I'll do it." I turn to CJ, who looks utterly stricken. I can sympathize. But this is Joy's game. She's got to call it the way she sees it. "Let go of him, man." CJ leans into Cahill's ear. "Give me another chance, Cahill. You're dead." Face dripping, Cahill pulls away from his brother-in- law and fixes his unfocused gaze on his wife. "I know you, Joy. You're the other half of me. I'm gonna be with you, baby." "Brian, please just go. This is not helping." She holds her hand out without explanation. Like a guilty teenager, Cahill sullenly surrenders his car keys. "Now go up to the corner and call a cab." He grasps her hand for a moment but she shakes free, turning away from him. "Pete will drop your keys by tomorrow. Okay Pete?" "Yeah, sure, Joy." "You better go now, Brian." We watch in silence as he stumbles away. NC 12 3:34 AM A gray patrol car, sirens blaring, blue lights flashing, hangs a left up the side street that runs by the Handy Mart. I wait for it to pass so that I can turn into the parking lot of the Surf Motel, which is beginning to feel like my new home away from home. Oh yeah, a domestic dispute. Well, they're Johnny- on-the-spot, aren't they? My head is full of white noise. I've been this tired many times before, but being used to exhaustion doesn't make it any easier to take. I'm going to have to sleep. There's no way around it. I pull in next to Mulder's car. It's comforting, in a way, having this piece of his life, this tie to him, nearby. But something about it has changed. The interior light is on. Wide awake now, I scramble out of my seat belt. It's the driver's side door, unlocked and ajar, which is triggering the light. His gun is gone. No, no, no, no... Which direction to run...I race into the motel, disregarding the desk clerk's inquiries, trying to get to Mulder's room before the unthinkable can happen. Or has it already happened? The room is empty, as I left it earlier. I head for the beach, legs pumping, sand flying, my heart in my mouth. Panic, which I have held down with an iron will ever since Mulder's disappearance, now gets the upper hand. I scream his name into the night five times, ten times, but the only answer that comes is the sound of wind and surf. You bastard, you bastard, you bastard... Mulder, I am so fucking mad at you. I'll never forgive you for this. I sit on the beach for a long time, cold in the wind. This is just like Sacramento. The helplessness and betrayal don't feel any different. No matter how desperate I may be to protect him from himself, Mulder is out there making his own decisions, living his life according to his own dictates, and there's nothing I or anybody else can do about it. In the end, I am not, cannot be responsible for him. I have to let him go. Maybe I should just go back to Washington. To do what? Wait for the phone call that confirms his death? 17-B BUXTON COVE DRIVE 4:39 AM "What the hell is wrong with you, Joy? Don't you care anything about your own safety? What about Gabriel, for Chrissakes?" "CJ, please calm down, I know what I'm doing." "I can't fucking calm down. Your fucking husband just tried to fucking kill you and you could have had him arrested, but instead you let him walk. It's attempted murder, Joy. You had witnesses. Just say the word and we'll go get him." "I can't do that." "Please, Joy. It's not too late." "I can't." "Joy, he's right," Tessa says softly, sadly. "You can't let him get away with what he did. We can call the sheriff back right now. They can go pick him up." "You guys, please calm down. He was just drunk, trying to get attention. He wasn't going to shoot me. He wouldn't shoot me." "Oh, right. There's no problem, he's completely harmless. He was so fucking harmless last spring that you had to go to the hospital. You must have gotten brain damage from that, Joy." CJ's face is beet red and his large, square hands open and close with pent-up fury. "Could we please not wake Gabe up, okay?" CJ slams his body into a chair and has nothing further to say. He slumps, staring at the floor. Tessa sighs. "Anybody want a shot? I think we could use one." Pete speaks up from his perch on the back of the sofa. "I'll take one." Joy takes a deep breath. "Yeah, me, too. C'mon, CJ. Have a drink. What about you, Fox?" I look up. "Sure." I have not joined their discussion. It's not my place to speak. I've wedged myself into a corner of the sofa to rest my head against a cushion. I'm hot. I rub my hand across my face, discovering a whole new world of injuries left over from my encounter with Cahill's boot and the driveway. CJ and Pete have their own injuries and seem nearly as sore and stiff as I am. Joy looks at us with a brave smile. "Look at you guys. My white knights. Anybody need a band-aid?" Her joke floats through the gloom unappreciated. She stands up, eyes flashing. "Look, everybody, cheer up. I'm really sorry for what Brian did. I know you think I'm crazy but you just don't know Brian like I do. He's Gabe's daddy, okay? I'm not going to put Gabe's daddy in jail. Guys, c'mon. You have to be patient with the people you love." "Are you saying you still love him?" CJ mutters this from between clenched teeth, a sob in his voice. "No, no, that's not really what I mean." Joy kneels down next to him, touching his hand. "CJ, he's Gabe's daddy. *She* loves him. I've got to work this out some other way." Their eyes lock in the kind of communion that can only exist between siblings. He leans his head against hers, tears of frustration fresh on his face. I close my eyes. I cannot stand to watch them together. I had a sister once. I would have a bond like this, had it not been taken from me. Tessa returns from the kitchen with Kyle, carrying a bottle of Jim Beam and a couple of shot glasses. Emily, who has been sitting silently near the front door, stands up. I sense that she would like to escape an uncomfortable situation. "Guys, I'm gonna go home," she says. "Fox, ccan I give you a ride back to your motel?" Oh *right*, Emily. Just let me get you alone. Joy speaks up. "Fox needs nursing care before he's allowed to go anywhere." Emily acknowledges this with a knowing look. "Okay. Hey, Fox. It was really nice to...meet you. Anybody else want a ride back?" Pete swallows a shot. "Yeah, me. Shit, I've gotta check the beer in at noon. What about you, Kyle?" "I'm gonna stay here tonight." "CJ, need a ride?" He looks up with a frown. "I'm not leaving." Emily pokes him with her foot. "Grump. Good night, everybody." Tessa pours me a shot. "Here ya go, Fox. Drink up, it's good for you." I lean forward to take the shot glass from her. A stab of pain shoots through my body and my head begins to spin. I collapse back into the sofa with a groan. I'm ready to pass out now. Nothing would be nicer. I am surrounded by the smell of jasmine as Joy sits next to me. I wish I could hide in that scent, pulling it around me like a soft blanket. Her hand is on my forehead. I'm so hot. "You are a mess, Mr. Federal Agent. Lie down and I'll get something to clean that scrape." I sink into half-consciousness. Someone tells me to sit up and take these aspirin, and I do, falling back onto a soft pillow that wasn't there before. I can feel the sting of alcohol, her soft hands gently dabbing my face. Someone covers me with a blanket. I am vaguely aware, as I pull it over my head and give in to unconsciousness, of CJ and Joy nearby, arguing on and on in low and earnest voices. The next thing I know, gray daylight is soaking through the curtains of the living room. A small face hovers above mine, looking concerned. "Fox has an owie." Gabriel proclaims in a very serious voice. "I'll kiss it." She leans down and plants a kiss on my cheek just below the scrape. "Thanks, Doctor Gabriel." "Gabey, don't wake Fox up, he's not feeling well." Joy comes into the living room, fully dressed. The smell of coffee drifts in with her from the kitchen. "It's okay." I mumble, feeling completely washed out. I sit up, although I would like nothing better than to go back to sleep. "I should go back to my motel." "No, stay here. There's coffee, and some juice in the fridge. I have to take Gabe over to my mom's. I'll be back in half an hour." She leans down and kisses me on the top of the head. "God, Fox. Thanks for all you did last night." Shit. What does she mean? I guess she's referring to the way I handled the Sheriff's Deputies who showed up soon after Cahill's departure last night. It was against my better judgment, but I did what Joy wanted me to do: I identified myself as a friend of the family, flashed my badge and told them we had the situation under control. I gave them Cahill's gun so that they could dispose of it, and that was that. They were satisfied and so was Joy. CJ had stood at the bottom of the stairs fuming until the deputies were gone, then laid into Joy with so much fury I thought we would have to call them back. There was nothing I could do about that, though. It was their argument, and CJ was right. My current state of sobriety makes me wonder if I should have taken his side. "Jesus, Joy, I hope you don't end up regretting the way we handled things last night." "No, Fox. We did the right thing. Thanks for standing up for me. Tell Fox 'bye', Gabey." I get a hug almost sweet enough to ease the soreness in my body. I sit motionless on the couch for a long time after they've gone. CJ is rolled up in a sleeping bag on the floor, snoring. Outside, the sky is the color of old dishwater and it looks like it's going to rain. A perfect match for conditions inside my head. I go to the bathroom and then creep to the kitchen, wrapped in my blanket. Two glasses of water slide down my throat like a quart of old motor oil. I pour myself a cup of coffee. There's a bedroom just off the kitchen - Tessa and her sister are still sleeping soundly. It's totally quiet. I lean against the kitchen counter, staring down blearily at black and white tiles that shift and weave in a most disconcerting way. For the last 36 hours, large quantities of alcohol have enabled me to avoid thinking about Scully. I'm no more willing to think of her now, but it is still and silent, and I am alone and stone cold sober. Remembrance starts as a tight feeling in my throat and quickly washes through my whole nervous system, flooding my body with the pain I have been trying so desperately to avoid. What the hell am I doing here? What kind of complete asshole am I? She must wonder where I am. She's probably worried sick about me. I didn't show up for work yesterday; I haven't called...after what happened, I'm sure she would have wanted to talk. Shit, she said as much. After what happened. I've dreamed about it for years, rehearsing in fantasy every nuance of the moment I've been sure would come one day. In my imagination I take her in my arms and kiss her so tenderly that there can be no doubt in her mind of my intentions...our lips meet and in an instant she knows how I want to spend the rest of my life. Her face lights with one of those rare Scully smiles, the ones I wait for and cherish when they come. I've been insane, all these years, to dream of her. I'm as full of delusions about my relationship to Scully as I have been about everything else in my life. I'll never be with her the way I've imagined, because I am ineffectual as a human being, incapable of connecting on an emotional level, incapable of the tenderness to which I have aspired. I'm cold as stone. There's nothing in me that's worth offering to her. When I kissed her the night before last, it wasn't about showing her how much I loved her. I don't want to think of it, but I can't help remembering the look of confusion on her face. That kiss was nothing more than my selfish attempt to make myself feel better. And god help me, she knew it. She tried to tell me. I can't believe I did that to Scully. It was disrespectful, a betrayal of all we've shared over the years. I've asked too much. I've ruined everything. I don't know if she'll ever forgive me for this. I know I'll never forgive myself. I don't want tears, but they're coming anyway. There's nothing I can do about it anymore. I've smashed things and hurt people and wrecked my body trying to deny this pain, but it's still here. It's still here. It won't go away. I could keep trying but I don't see the point. My gun sits on a high shelf above the television. I take it down and check the clip; it's ready, just like yesterday. I try not to wake CJ as I push the screen door open. I step barefoot into the late September morning; the stairs weave under my feet like the tiles in the kitchen. It's much cooler than yesterday, and the salt air hangs leaden under a blanket of low clouds. Nearby, marshy grasses that were hidden in darkness last night stretch out to the banks of the Pamlico Sound. All I need is a quiet place, out of the way. As I reach the bottom of the stairs, though, all the blood drains out of my head. Fuck, not again...the siding is rough against my shoulder as I slide down the wall, coming to rest on the bottom step. Oh, Christ, come on. I just need to walk a few more feet. I can't fucking shoot myself on Joy's doorstep. "You all right?" Suddenly, Joy is next to me, touching my arm, her voice barely audible. Has it really been half an hour since she left? I didn't hear her come home. She takes my gun gently, without comment. "Can you walk if I help you?" She takes me by the arms and guides me effortlessly up the stairs, through the living room and into her bedroom. I sit on her bed, curling into myself, trying to make myself small. I have never felt so impotent. God, how I wish I could just disappear. Joy is holding me, her body warm against mine, but I am alone, locked away, as always. I don't deserve kindness. It's too late now. "Fox, why did you come here?" My mouth is dry. It's hard to speak. "I lost my mother last week." Joy's tone is light and low. "I'm sorry." "She..." It's still so vivid. "There was a gas oven...sleeping pills..." I shudder in the ensuing silence. Her next words come in a hush. "That's no reason for you to do it, too." God, I'm choking. Why can't I breathe? "It's more than that, isn't it?" Now I'm speaking in rapid gasps, forcing the words to come. "God, you wouldn't even believe most of it. The hardest thing is, I have a friend and I'm in love with her." I can't talk about this. I can't. I won't survive. "She doesn't..." Oh fuck. What the fuck. How can this hurt so much? "Fox, I've been where you are. I know it doesn't seem like it, but there's a way out. You're denying yourself, denying the way you feel. You can't do that anymore. Face it, Fox. Touch it. Make it real." "I don't think you know what you're asking, Joy." My heart is swelling. With each beat it grows larger, taut with years of negation and despair. Waves of pain crash against its doors, tightly locked and barred against the surge. "Fox, Fox, you're safe here..." Her hands are on my face. "Don't touch me." I'm so hot; I can't breathe, so alone, so alone... "Please, take your hands off me...god, you don't know..." "Yeah, I do. Fox, you're not alone." "I am. I always am." "Not anymore. I'm here. I'll stay with you." Gentle fingers turn my face toward hers. I'm closing my eyes. I can't look in her eyes... My voice is whispering. It sounds far away. "Let me be dead or like the dead..." "Fox, no." "Let me be dead or like the dead..." There is pleading in her voice. "You don't have to choose this. Be alive, Fox. Be alive." I am shattering like ice. Falling like snow but I can't find the ground. There's nowhere to rest, nowhere to go...I can't breathe, I need air. I don't want this, oh god, oh take it away... My body convulses and my heart bursts open. The deluge is thick and black, full of rocks and refuse and bits of my guts. It is a storm on the ocean, growing more deadly by the minute, sucking heat from the depths to fuel its violence. At once I am rigid with rage, sobbing into my hands as they tear at my face. There is a keening sound, like a wounded animal, suffering wordlessly, dying without questioning. That's me, I'm that animal. It's me. "You're not dying, Fox. Shh, you're safe." My grief is vast. It creates its own energy, humming at the core of my being, illuminating bones and sinews, burning flesh away as I reach to touch it. Embracing the heat, I am in flames. This is what is in me. This is what I am. Joy holds me close. I feel her touch everywhere. Time stops. I am ashen, lifeless, spent. I could crumble to nothing at the slightest pressure. I listen to the air as it moves through the silence - particles of matter and vibration pass through in majestic promenade, discovering the hollow recesses inside my soul, feather-dusting the raw nerves that line those chasms. And I am breathing. Breathing, slowly. When I open my eyes, she is near, her gaze unfaltering and passionate. She reaches up to wipe tears from my face, and then, oh god, we are kissing. I am dazed, falling, lost in the dusky feel of her mouth, the sweet sensation of her lips enfolding mine. She breathes into me. I feel her presence, pure as mist, intrepid and soothing, venturing with ease into places long denied. I am flinging wide the doors, opening every crevice of my self to let her in. I want her inside me. I want to be filled with her. Now my hands are lifting to her face, my fingers are tangled in her hair as I pull her to me, kissing her with the fervor of the newly awakened. She is on top off me, her tongue buried in my mouth, thick and wet. We are one motion, locked chest to chest, belly to belly. "Joy, I...shit." I interrupt myself with a hoarse moan as she slowly licks my bottom lip, sighing with pleasure. "Joy, can we? Do you want to?" For an answer she leaves the bed and stands beside it, unbuttoning her green flannel shirt. She pulls the shirt free and I move to the edge of the bed, my hands roaming over her small, round breasts, so warm, oh god...my lips brush pearly nipples and then I lick them, one after the other. They are ripe and nourishing. Her light gasps are like music, her fingernails delightfully sharp as they dig into my shoulders. I've got to see all of her. God, she's so beautiful. My hands travel under her flimsy cotton skirt, up long thighs like satin...no panties, oh shit, nothing in my way. We remove the skirt together. Her body is golden. She is my star now, the light on my horizon, my new beginning, my dawn. I'm on my feet, pulling my shirt over my head, shedding my jeans, reaching from behind her to stroke her breasts again. She grinds the curve of her ass against my pelvis, reaching back to stroke my balls, throwing her head against my shoulder. I bury my face in her hair, feeding on her, finding her ear, her neck, her throat to devour. She turns, wrapping her arms around my neck, and pulls me back onto the bed. Joy sits astride me, her face exquisite, her hands massaging my chest and my arms, her fingers trailing like rainwater down my belly... She touches her lips to my ear. "Fox, right now, in this instant, we only belong to each other. There's nothing else but right now." She lifts her hips, her fingers tight around my cock. I feel her, slick and soft, and now, ohhhh yessssssss... I am memorizing this moment: her taste, her texture, the feeling of being inside her, the feeling of being joined to her. I am memorizing myself, the man I am in this instant. I am human. I am connected. I am capable of tenderness. I'm not made of stone. I'm alive. I'm alive. End of Part Five Title - Dreaming Omega (6/7) Author - Spookey247 (spookey247@msn.com) Part Three: To Bear and Not to Own 17-B BUXTON COVE DRIVE 10:20 AM "Fox?" "Yes?" "Tell me her name." Boy, I really don't want to go there. A part of me wants to leave that life behind and only exist in this moment, the one that Joy and I have chosen together. We are a tangle of arms and legs, smelling deliciously of sweat and semen and her sweet, sweet juices. "What happened to you and me and nothing else but now?" Her lips are on my forehead. I lift my face to kiss her, but the gravity in her expression stops me short. "Fox, I can't help it. This is going to sound nuts, but I can feel her. It's so strong it's almost like I could see her face. I just...I want to know her name." There's a tight feeling in my throat. To speak Scully's name is to acknowledge all that brought me here. The pain is fresh and full... I try not to fight it. I try to let my body be calm as I remember Scully's face, beautiful, wise, a fractal echo inside my body, pervading the cells that make me what I am. I may be far from her, but Scully is with me, present in this moment as surely as I am. If Joy wants to know me, then she is justified in wanting to know Scully, too. "Her name's Dana Scully. We've been partners for years." Joy closes her eyes, quiescent, processing the information without seeming to judge its meaning. Then her lips curl up in a contented smile. "Thanks." I trace my finger over the smile. Why is it that I go for such complicated women? "Why thanks?" "Because I know that was hard for you." "God, Joy..." There is so much I need to say but I am beyond words. When I came here I was like my father: childish and self-absorbed, consumed by a quest that was insubstantial and destructive to my self and those around me. I loved no one and nothing. Now...it's impossible to express what she has awakened in me. "Fox, what?" She is raking her fingers across my chest. I'm getting hard again - I am so hungry for her. Her slightest motion arouses me. "I need to be with you." "Be with me, then." Both of her hands circle my ass, and she grinds her hips against mine. Her hands travel up my back, exploring, caressing, and come to rest in my hair. "Be with me," she growls, her lips parting, sucking greedily at my tongue as I slowly slip it inside her mouth. I'm reaching down to find the wet slit that I know is waiting for my fingers. Her sharp gasp lets me know I have found her. Oh god, yes, it's hot, I'm a lucky man, I can't believe I can touch her this way. I run a finger across the stiff point of flesh and she groans as I begin to stroke her there. "Here, oh baby, don't stop..." she reaches down to guide my fingers to the perfect spot and I go to work, my other hand sliding toward her breast, pinching the nipple hard as I sink my fingers inside her, first one, then two, now three, opening her wide to my caress, pausing now and then to circle my thumb in her juices. We stare into each other's eyes and I thrill to the flush on her cheeks, the way her eyelids flutter each time my fingers delve more deeply, each time my thumb strokes her just the right way. I can give it back, oh yes, I can give it back to her...her hips lift off the bed as she moves against my hand and her breathing is sharp and rapid. It's beautiful. I love the way it sounds. I know I need to taste her and I descend quickly, kicking the sheets back, urged on by her hands, which push at my shoulders, urged on by the sob of need in her voice as she cries, "Yes, do it baby..." She is delicious. I explore the contours of her flesh with my tongue, making the exhilarating journey from the slippery depths to the smooth, salty heights time and time again. Her moans come stifled as she pulls a pillow over her face...I love this, she is screaming, she can't control herself ...suddenly she sits bolt upright and she flings the pillow aside, pulling me to her, licking at my lips, tasting herself, whispering voraciously, "Inside me, oh god. You've got to fuck me now, now, now..." I don't need to be told again. I feel like I'm going to pop as it is. I throw myself on top of her and before I know it, I am driving inside her, we are bucking against each other, she is holding onto the headboard, her legs wrapped around my back, moving like a wild animal against me. All at once her legs begin to shake. Her face, oh shit, her face...her mouth drops open as she comes, forming a perfect O. Her eyes roll back and her sighs tear at my heart. Memorize this moment, keep this vision forever...my entire body goes rigid, "Oh Joy, Joy, Joy..." This is paradise. Our paradise, together. I dream she is cutting my hair. It is morning and I am sitting half-dressed in her kitchen with sunlight streaming through the blinds like melted butter. The scissors are a blur in her hands. Little hairs are flying everywhere like shards of marble from a sculptor's chisel. I am Michelangelo's statue, trapped in stone, and she is setting me free. I float back to consciousness and oh, yes, she is beside me, long arms wrapped tight and warm around my body. We are snuggled together like puppies at rest. I bask in the intimacy of her bed, burrowing more deeply into worn flannel sheets that smell exotically of jasmine and sex. "Fox?" "Uh-huh..." I answer her sleepily. I don't know how long we've been napping, but I am delighted to find myself still inside her. I feel like a little kid who just unwrapped the biggest box under the tree. "Can I ask something?" "Anything." "I want to ask if I can photograph you." "Really? What, like, Playgirl stuff? Gonna post me on the Web or something?" I run my tongue along the edge of her ear. "Mmmm, yes. Women all over the world will shower me with gratitude..." Just the thought of this is giving me an erection. My fingers travel lightly across her breasts. "That part about the shower...think we could give it a try?" Joy's smile fades. She trails her fingers wistfully through my hair, kisses me softly, and then rolls slowly away. It's all I can do not to whine like a child as she sits up on the edge of the bed, her back to me, her voice low. "I want to do it as soon as possible, on the beach where we met yesterday. And then...god, I can't believe I'm saying this...Fox, I want you to go home." Do I have to go home? I don't even know where that is anymore. I'm awake now. "What's the matter, Joy? I don't want to go home." I pull her back into the bed and she throws her arms around my neck and hides her face against my chest like what she just said to me ten seconds ago was all a bad dream. "I know...that's not really what I want either and that's the whole problem." As she speaks, I feel her body tight and restive against my own. She's fighting this, fighting me. Oh god, when they find out how crippled I am, they always turn away. "I didn't mean for things to go this far...I don't know what it was, something chemical, maybe, or a past life thing, or maybe I just looked at you and saw someone who needed the same things as me. I didn't really think ahead. I just...god, I just wanted you." I have never felt so exposed. My heart races with raw fear until her next words come, whispered and urgent. "I didn't know it was going to feel like this, you know? It's totally natural, like I've been waiting for you, like this hidden part of me knew you were coming. I want you to stay. Today, and tonight, and tomorrow. But Fox, I've got this gut feeling that it's not our time. I know you're not mine." I meet Joy's intense gaze, searching her face for signs of betrayal and instead finding nothing there but love, unguarded and without blemish. She's with me. She has seen what I am and she is not afraid. "Joy, Joy...I want to stay with you." "I believe that's what you want right now." She lays a hand against my cheek, smiling ruefully. "Check me if I'm wrong, Fox, but you did have a life before you came here. What about that?" If she only knew how much I want to shed that life. I have fucked it up so miserably. "I don't want it anymore...god, you have no idea." "All I know is what I see in you. You've been hurt a lot." "Yes. And so have you. Give me a chance to help you, like you've helped me." She closes her eyes, pulling the curtain on the conflict inside. I've seen her do this before. God, she's stubborn. She thinks she's invulnerable. She won't admit what's happening here. "Listen to me, Joy. When I came here I hated myself. I was dead inside. Being with you, god, it's like - suddenly everything is possible. Do you know that? Can you feel it? Even if I go home today, I think we should see each other again. I think this thing between us, whatever it is, deserves a chance." "I would love that." She kisses me deeply, deliberately, sending shivers through my entire body. Then she sits up with a determined air. "But Fox, we're both completely unstable and that scares the hell out of me. We're on the edge, both of us in situations that are really heavy. We have got so much unresolved shit and who knows what we'll be facing when we come out on the other side. I mean, right now we could just say fuck it and try to be together, but those same problems will still be there. They're only going to get solved with lots of energy and attention... Fox, I've got a kid to raise. I can't afford to make any more mistakes. Do you understand?" I guess the whole problem with living purely in the moment is the inevitable sucker-punch you get from reality. While you lie dreaming it marches in and kicks you in the ass, unforgiving and dispassionate as a cop moving a vagrant off a park bench. It is amazing, given the circumstances, but I do understand. My life is not going to disappear just because I turn my back on it. I already know how badly things could end if I choose to do that. Scully's not going to disappear, either. I don't want to turn my back on her. I've got to make things right between us. I've got to go home. But good god, Joy, how can we end this? I roll over and put my head in Joy's lap. It's a sacred act, gazing up at her face. Right now this is my entire universe, the only place I want to be. "Thank you." "What for?" "For saving me." "I can't save you, Fox." I reach up to stroke her hair. She takes my hand and kisses each finger in turn. Then she closes her eyes. "You know what?" she whispers. "What?" "We've got to get out of this bed right now." She's right, as usual. "So that's it, then. I haven't got a leg to stand on." She nods tenderly. "But you want to immortalize me before I go home." "Yes, I really do. You'll make an amazing picture. Let me, okay?" "I will never say no to you, Joy." I am rolling her under me. I can't make them real yet, the words we've just spoken. All I want now is her body against mine, radiant and divine. I want to give back all that she's given me. I could spend my life doing that, giving myself to her, both of us filling each other. SURF MOTEL, ROOM 109 11:53 AM I am tiny, the size of a grasshopper, and something I can't see is holding me aloft by the back of the neck. It pinches hard, paralyzing my shoulders and back. My feet are dangling and kicking frantically, faster and faster, as I struggle to get free of the pain. I am moving impossibly fast now, turning into a blur, writhing and screaming for the unseen force to let me go. All of the sudden I am falling fast, as if sucked into a void, shrieking with every fiber of my being. I jerk awake. There is a thudding sound. What is that? "Agent Scully. Agent Scully." Someone is knocking on the door. In the same instant my cell phone rings. I hit the send button before I have any clue what I'm doing. "Uh, yes?" "Agent Scully?" "Yes." "Deputy Capp here, Dare County Sheriff's Department." Oh god. "May I help you?" "I just came into work down here in the Buxton office and saw the missing persons report you filed with Deputy Fowler last night... I would have contacted you sooner but I had to take some evidence up to Manteo last night and then I went on home from there. I wanted to tell you that I spoke with your Agent Mulder extensively about three o'clock this morning." "Deputy, could you hold on a minute?" I open the door to find the motel manager standing in the hallway holding the hand of a little girl. "Hi." "Good morning, Agent Scully, I think I've found your friend." "Come in." I raise the cell phone to my ear again. "Deputy, sorry. Someone was talking to me. Where did you speak with Agent Mulder?" "Ma'am, he was present at the scene of a domestic call in Buxton last night. Apparently a young man came to the residence intoxicated with an unregistered weapon. Agent Mulder had already handled the dispute when we arrived, said he was a friend of the family. When I saw him last he was still at that residence. I didn't know he'd been reported missing or I would have called in." "Thanks for calling me, can you hold on again?" I turn to the manager. "I'm sorry. The deputy is telling me he's seen my partner at a residence here in town." "Yes, he's at my daughter's apartment on Buxton Cove Drive. My granddaughter's told me all about him...there could only be one Fox, don't you think? She keeps talking about her new friend Fox. She says he's there now. Lord, what were the police doing at my daughter's home?" I return to the phone. "Deputy, the motel manager here is telling me that Agent Mulder is at her daughter's residence. What's the address where you spoke with him?" The two addresses match. I thank the deputy, end the call, and turn to the manager. "I'm sorry, I don't remember your name." "I'm Nell Allen. Do you want me to phone my daughter and see if your friend is still there?" "No, thanks, I'll go myself. Can you give me directions?" It's almost impossible to believe, but all last night, Mulder was only two blocks away. 17 Buxton Cove Drive sits on the edge of a marsh looking three times older than Hatteras Island itself. My guts feel like they've been wrapped in duct tape. I climb a rotting stairway to the second floor apartment and knock. A brawny guy in his late twenties comes to the door looking dazed and confused. Clearly, I have awakened him out of a sound sleep. "Yeah, can I help you?" I flash my badge. "I'm Agent Scully of the FBI. I'm looking for Fox Mulder." He blinks sleepily. "Shit. Okay, come on in. Dude, someone's here to...hey, Mulder..." The living room is drab but comfortable, filled with odd bits of furniture and smelling faintly of beer. "Ma'am, he was here...he was sleeping on the couch right there." He disappears into what I assume to be the kitchen and I hear him talking with someone, a woman, or maybe two women, from the sound of things. He comes back into the living room and knocks lightly on a closed door to the left of the kitchen. "Joy? Hey, you in there?" He pushes the door open to reveal an empty room and an unmade bed. "Damn," he mutters, "Sorry, ma'am. I don't know what to tell you." He looks out into the driveway. "He might be with my sister. They were hanging out last night. Her car's not here, so maybe they went to get breakfast or something. I don't know. I just got up." The idea that Mulder may have spent last night making time with some young lady while I spent last night searching for him and fearing for his life is enough to send me screaming off the end of the local fishing pier. I cannot help but cast a glance into the woman's bedroom. I can see that the bedclothes have been kicked completely off the bed, lying in a crumpled heap on the floor. Pillows are lying askew, deliberately thrown aside. With a sick, sinking feeling I notice something lying near the foot of the bed, something I cannot possibly ignore: a man's t-shirt, sweat-soaked and heather gray. I know whose shirt that is. I know why it is here. End of Part Six Title - Dreaming Omega (7/7) Author - Spookey247 (spookey247@msn.com) To Bear and Not to Own: Two NATIONAL SEASHORE, HATTERAS ISLAND 1:53 PM "Hey, hand me that. I'm going to ruin the leather." My jeans are completely soaked. She slings the sleeping bag in my direction and I throw it over the seat. "You can ride naked if you want." She shoots me a sly sidelong glance. It's almost more than I can take. "Ride naked, swim naked, pose naked...I think I'm sensing some deep issues, here, Joy. Why won't you let people keep their clothes on?" "Don't go getting all Sigmund Freud with me, Mister. Do the math. In your case it's not real complicated." Joy pops a CD into the player. We pull out of the empty parking lot and head for Buxton. Her hand snakes toward my thigh. I reach out to stroke her arm. My god, we can't seem to keep our hands off each other. There is something oddly fitting about the grayness of this day with its constant drizzle and forlorn ocean breeze. The music she is playing is lush, languid, a wash of guitars with a slow bass that shakes the floor of the car. It's so new, this feeling, riding beside her, carried aloft by sound, transported and transformed by sensation. Only this moment is real. I don't want to know any other. We're too sad for conversation. We have already agreed that I'll check out of the Surf Motel and leave for Washington when we return to town. My body still hums from our last coupling. Our photo session on the deserted beach overwhelmed our resolve and we found ourselves entangled once more, wrapped in a sleeping bag amongst the dunes where we first met, the rain falling unheeded on naked flesh. It was slow this time, so, so slow. When I pushed into her, it was not so much about pleasure as a need to know the deepest part of her, to find some purchase there, a way to anchor myself so that I would not have to leave. She moaned with delight, feeling me that way, lifting her long legs to make it deeper, moving against me almost imperceptibly, lapping at my throat and breathing soft obscenities into my ear, begging me to hold on, make it even deeper before I let go. It was indescribable. I wish we were still there, locked together, just like that. I felt the truth of things in that moment, dizzy from holding back my orgasm. It's simple. The truth is passion, the feeling of soul touching soul. We held each other for a long time when we were through. After a few minutes I realized she was crying. I felt like crying, too. "Hey, are we doing the right thing? I don't know if I can go back." "It's the only thing to do. I know she's really worried about you." She wiped her eyes and began pulling on clothes that were far too damp to bother with. Okay, I thought. If she can be this selfless, then dammit, so can I. I began to dress, shivering as my skin contacted wet denim. "She doesn't want me. I only cause trouble for her...you don't know the half of it." "That's true. I don't know anything about her at all. But I think I'm uniquely qualified to speak for her. She wants you, Fox. Trust me on that one." "Okay, since you're so highly qualified, why do you think she wants me?" She thought for a moment and then her answer came with a shy grin. "You know how they say life is a journey? I think she thinks you're one hell of a guy to travel with." She reached up to wipe a raindrop from my cheek. "God, Fox, I feel like I've known you forever." "I don't have to leave, Joy. You're kicking me out of your life just because things might get messy." Joy's eyes filled with tears. God, I didn't mean to make her cry again. "Shit, they're messy already. I have to try to keep things neat, though, for Gabe's sake." She shook her head, getting control of herself. "Goddammit. I try not to ever feel sorry for myself." "That's one of the things I love about you." She did not acknowledge my words. She didn't want to talk about it anymore. It was asking too much. So now we ride along without talking, touch our only form of communication. We are coming into Buxton. Joy stops the car at a traffic light. "Your friend, Dana. It's going to be good between you two. What we've had together... you'll have this with her, and better." It's easy to envision staying here. A big part of me wants to do just that. Joy knows, though, what I haven't been willing to admit to her or myself: that the most fundamental parts of me belong to Scully. As much as I am dreading leaving Joy, I am looking forward to going home, because I have discovered that I am a fully functioning human being. I *can* love Scully, I *do* love Scully, just as I love Joy. If I am supremely lucky, Scully will love me in return, just as Joy loves me. And if Scully chooses not to love me, I will grieve the loss and move on with my life. My eyes are open now. It's worth staying on earth just to learn to see clearly. The drizzle intensifies as we pull into the parking lot of the Surf Motel. We both get out of the car and stand in the rain. "I guess this is my stop." Suddenly I am in ruins, shattered and defenseless, terrified to be ripped from my safe haven and thrust back into the world. This is what it feels like to love someone and need someone and to have to say good-bye. This is what it is to be alive. I catch Joy's hands in my own, aching for her. "I'd like to call you when I get back home. Is that okay?" She stares at the ground. "Give me your address. I don't know where I'll be." I reach into my wallet for a business card. "What do you mean?" "I think I might go on the road for a while. I need a change of scene." I take her in my arms, feeling disturbed and unspeakably sad. Nothing about this is right. "But you have to keep up your end of the deal, Joy. Start on the restraining order today." She rests her cheek against mine. "Don't worry about me, Fox. I'll be okay." "You think you're so tough." "Yeah, I'm a real bitch." "But don't take chances. People can surprise you. Please, follow through on this. For me, okay?" "Will you just kiss me good-bye? I hate this and I want to get it over with." We hug each other so tightly it hurts, but for the first time in my life I don't fear the pain. It is part of me and I welcome it. She lifts her face to gaze at me and I am lost, cast adrift in a sea of jasmine. Her lips are warm, so very warm... ...and I am crossing the parking lot alone, soaked to the skin and chilled to the bone. SURF MOTEL, ROOM 109 2:41 PM When I lay dying of cancer not quite three years ago, my brother Bill vented his anxiety and grief by talking incessantly about all the ways he was going to repay Fox Mulder for the trouble he had caused me and my family. This kind of thing was, of course, the last thing I needed to hear. On several occasions my mother sent Bill away from my bedside because he was upsetting me so badly. In retrospect I almost have to laugh about those moments - it was like we were kids again and he was being disciplined for teasing me too much. It's funny how even the most dire situations can fail to change the sibling dynamic. I am sitting in an uncomfortable chair by the sliding glass doors that lead to the terrace. The manager of the motel gave me a key to Mulder's room last night, to help me with my search. When I finally admitted defeat early this morning, I came back here to sleep. This was in part so that I would not miss Mulder should he return, but another part of me simply wanted to be in the last place on earth I knew for sure he had been alive. I am cursing myself now for being so sentimental. Now I know hose feelings were completely unjustified. Bill's words of three years ago echo in my head and, for once in my life, I am relishing them. "I can't understand why you continue to defend him, Dana. What's the attraction here? It was just an assignment, you know, and you have friends who could have helped you get out of it. All he's ever done is use you and cause you pain. The next time I see him, I swear I'm going to kick his ass." God, Bill, I hate to admit it, but you may have been right. I have never felt more used and manipulated than I do right now and yes, yes, yes, I would love it if you were here to kick Fox Mulder's ass. He's been jerking me around for years. He pretends to want me but then at the least provocation he shuts down, shuts me out, ditches me with no compunction. He says he loves me, but I know better. To him I'm just another part of the darkness. I've allowed myself to fall forr him, even though I know the truth. Mulder is incapable of loving me in return. I rise from the chair and stare out at the dunes behind the motel. I should really go home. I don't even know why I'm still here. What am I, some sort of masochist? There is a click at the door and I hear the lock turn. I am desperate to flee, but my body won't comply. For the second time in as many days I find that I am on autopilot, but this time my hormones aren't doing the driving. You're right about one thing, Mulder, this is coming to an end. It's going to end right now. Mulder trudges listlessly into the room, gaze cast downward, unaware of my presence. He is dripping wet, a green flannel shirt clinging to his body and water trickling slowly from sandy hair and two days growth of beard. He jerks his gun from the back of his jeans and flings it carelessly on the bed with his keys. Standing quietly on the other side of the room, I watch as he moves toward the bed, stiff as an old dog after a fight. I am weak with relief. He is here. He's alive. He draws a deep breath and sighs heavily, passing his hand across scrapes and bruises to wipe the rain from his face. He looks up. Now he knows that I am here. Mulder's complexion fades from pale to white, his eyes widening with amazement. I am trembling, moving towards him as his expression transforms inexplicably from bewilderment to sheer, unmitigated delight. He steps forward, reaching for me, "Oh my god, Scully...how did you..." Now it hits me, the heady aroma of alcohol and sea water, of sweat and sex and another woman's perfume. I strike him so hard he nearly falls. Words are a hailstorm inside my head. I'd love to fire the storm his way, to pummel him without mercy until he comprehends the fear and desperation, the unrequited hours and miles, the years of loyalty that he ground under his heel when he went into that woman's bed. But I can't speak. I can't. If I speak he'll know everything and I refuse to expose my soul to him. I won't, not now, not ever again. Mute, I watch him catch himself, regaining his balance and touching the spot where my hand contacted his jaw. He is stunned, expressionless. I am all rage. We stare at each other for what seems like forever. He is the first one to look away. His eyes travel wildly around the room and he begins to pace, chest rising and falling, hands clenching and pulling at his clothing as if the heat in the room is more than he can bear. In this state he draws near, his tortured gaze returning to my face. Doubts are overpowering my mind like a swarm of ants: Oh god, Mulder, it used to be so easy between us and now I don't even recognize you. Who the hell are you? What do you want from me? How can I have known you so long and loved you so much, and have it all end so disastrously? I can't stand the way Mulder is looking at me, contrite and accepting, quietly asking forgiveness. Slowly, silently, he tears the green flannel shirt from his body and lets it fall to the floor. "Okay," he whispers raggedly. "Yeah, Scully. I know." He lifts a hand to touch my cheek. Then he goes to the bed and sits down with his back to me, dropping his head into his hands. Oh god, what was I expecting when I left that apartment on Buxton Cove Drive, convinced that Mulder had come here deliberately to manipulate me, to make sure I was good and worried while he indulged himself with alcohol and one night stands like some pampered frat boy? What was I expecting when I returned to this room, spoiling for a fight, ready to make him pay for the pain he had caused me? Who did I think was going to walk through that door? A monster? A creature of darkness whose express purpose in life is to make me suffer? Is that who is sitting over there on the bed? That's not a monster. That's Mulder. It's Mulder, my partner, my best friend, breathing and warm. All of a sudden I feel sick to my stomach. I sit on the opposite bed and reach toward him, coming back to myself. Remembering. Only one thing is real. Mulder's hands are normally fine and precise, as neat and smooth as a woman's. Those hands have held me when I have been injured or afraid and they have touched me with love when emotion drowns his ability to speak. I am looking at Mulder's hands, now swollen and discolored, split and battered and bruised. They are shaking violently. My god, his whole body is shaking. His arms and chest are a patchwork of red slash marks and blue-black bruises and my head fills up with images: the shredded sofa in his apartment, the shattered windows, the holes in the walls, the blood... This isn't about me. It never has been. I thought you had betrayed me and I forgot why we both came here. But now I remember. You weren't trying to hurt me. You were trying to hurt yourself. My heart is breaking as he slides off the bed, sinking to his knees and wrapping his arms around my waist, laying his head in my lap like a little boy. Oh my god, Mulder. I wanted to believe that you were superhuman, but you're not. You're not larger than life and neither am I. You have limits. I have limits. We're not above the quagmire, are we? We're right down in it. Right where we belong. I am flowing towards Mulder, gliding steady as a tear, overpowered by the smoothness of his body and the richness of his scent. Where once I was lost in doubts and fears, I now feel myself opening, ready to find the answers I have sought so long. I'm ready to face the truth. Drenched in profligate tears, Mulder takes my face in his hands, shaking his head in wonder. "I love you *so much*," he gasps softly. I cannot hide this from him any more. I am weeping, clinging to him, his shattered hands stroking and soothing me as I spill my guts, gulping for air, my voice strangled and unrecognizable. "Dammit, Mulder, what good does it do for you to love me? Where has it ever gotten us? You're such a bastard. All you do is ditch me...how do you think that makes me feel?" "Never again. I promise, Scully. I promise." "All I've ever wanted was to be part of the solution for you, not part of the problem. I've never deserted you, Mulder, I've always been there when you needed me." "I know, I know..." "I love you. You're...you're all I want, and I... god, Mulder, why don't you trust me?" Overcome, Mulder stares at me, lips moving soundlessly. When he speaks the anguish in his face is terrible to behold and his voice is so low I can hardly hear him. "If you love me, Scully, then why won't you let me be close to you?" I raise my hands to his face. Unanswered questions lose their power in the face of our reverence for each other. We are all eyes and thoughts, reliving this moment that has fallen flat so many times before. I can feel that we're going to get it right this time. I am weightless, diaphanous, so much a part of him that my body has ceased to exist. We've become like Siamese twins. We share dreams like vital organs. I don't know why, but I don't fear this anymore...it's so easy and honest it can't be wrong. "It doesn't matter anymore," I whisper, brushing his ear with my lips. "I want to be close to you. Let's give it a chance, Mulder. All we can do is try." I twine my fingers in his hair, lightly kissing the scrapes on his face, moving slowly toward his mouth. He moans faintly, pulls me closer, and in one sweeping move consumes me, lips, mouth, heart, soul. I rise out of myself and into him, and oh my god, the truth is here. Having dreamed this moment, we are making it real, creating it, living it, right now, in this instant. I never knew it could be this simple. End of Part Seven End of Story, For Now! Author's Note: This is my first fic and it took forever forever forever to write! I'd love to get feedback so please feel free! Spookey247@msn.com