From: ephemeral@ephemeralfic.org
Date: Thu, 17 Apr 2008 08:33:08 -0500 (CDT)
Subject: The End of Eschatology According to Fox Mulder by Maidenjedi
Source: direct

Reply To: texgoddess@yahoo.com


TITLE: The End of Eschatology According to Fox Mulder
AUTHOR: Maidenjedi
FANDOM: The X-Files
RATING: R
CATEGORY: post-series, Mulder/Scully 
SPOILERS: The whole series is up for grabs; specific spoilers 
for "The Truth," "Ice," and "Bad Blood"
DISCLAIMER: Not my characters, my concept, or my show. Damn it.
ARCHIVE:  Anywhere, just keep my name on it.
SUMMARY: The world isn't ending.  

NOTES:  Idea taken from the speculation that our dynamic duo 
could be separated at the beginning of the new film.  There are 
no actual spoilers for the film within this story.


XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

"...in this separation I associate you only with the good, and 
I will faithfully hold you to that always, for you must have 
done me far more good than harm, let me feel now what sharp 
distress I may." - Charles Dickens, Great Expectations

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX


The world wasn't ending after all.  Fox Mulder and Dana Scully 
were headed home.

They found out in Wyoming.  A message came to them through means 
they both thought had died with Langly, Frohike, and Byers.  A 
note on a table, a locker in a public place, and then a masked 
voice on a tape recorder.  A day passed, they left Wyoming for 
South Dakota, and another message was waiting for them.

"It's over.  You can come back."

Scully sat Mulder down in their motel room, and talked to him in 
a voice she might have saved for a child.

"These are the facts, Mulder.  We haven't seen any signs in over 
a year.  We haven't had to use the stiletto, or the magnetite, for 
longer than that.  We haven't been chased or followed, we haven't 
received threats."

"They could be better than we are, Scully."

"Mulder, we have these messages.  Two of them.  Will you at least 
give this a chance?"

In the end, Mulder convinced Scully to wait.  If they heard 
nothing else, they would continue as they had been, on the run.  
Always moving, hiding their identities (Scully's hair was a dark 
brown right now, and Mulder had grown a beard), working occasional 
odd jobs and never staying in public for long.  Totally dependent 
on each other, which suited Mulder fine.  

Two days later, they received another message.  This time, the 
voice was familiar.

"You can come home.  It's safe.  The world isn't ending."

Scully's eyes lit up in triumph, and Mulder conceded, but asked 
that they take it easy.  They headed east, steadily, still below 
the radar but with the tiniest bit less caution.  Scully washed 
the dye from her hair, and she almost convinced Mulder to shave.  
Except that she liked the way it felt on her skin, rough and kind 
of wild, so she gave up after a token try or two.  

Mulder knew things like that now.  

They got to Kentucky before they sat down to decide exactly how 
this would play out.  

"Should we go to the FBI?"

"No, no government.  They probably already know about this but why 
alert them further?"

"Yeah, you're right.  So what do you think?"

Home, said Scully's eyes, pleading with Mulder to at least give 
her that.

"Okay.  Home it is."

-

They separated in Virginia, each citing the need to clear their 
heads apart before continuing together.  Their parting had an awful 
finality to it, a tolling of the bell for a partnership that was no 
longer a matter of course.

She was visiting her mother, a tearful reunion that he hadn't 
wanted to witness. After all this time, just thinking of Scully's 
mom and her brother created a hard knot of guilt to gather in 
Mulder's stomach. It was worse, too, with William lost to time.  
They would ask, curious questions with an edge of accusation.  
Just for flavor.

A part of him wondered if William might hold them together 
after all, but he never said it aloud.  Scully hadn't wanted
to seek out their child, telling Mulder it would be cruel to
take him from parents he'd grown attached to.  Tears 
slipped down her cheeks and gave her away, but he wisely 
stayed silent. It made some sense, and Mulder never had 
felt justified in making decisions about William. 

Mulder had no family to seek out; he'd refrained from 
snapping at Scully about that, about how she was the only 
family he had in this world.  It was melodramatic and 
after all, they'd had three years in the wilderness 
together.  Scully had never been a wanderer at heart, she 
needed roots, and she'd begun to fade without them.

He retreated to a motel room in Alexandria, deciding to 
start with the familiar and work from there.  He considered 
heading to Greenwich to tie up affairs that had gone neglected 
for so long, since before Bellefleur.  He'd left lawyers with 
directions but he'd anticipated they would all be alien-human 
hybrids (or dead, whispers the blunt Scully-voice in his mind) 
by now.  He wasn't sure he wanted to confront those ghosts 
quite yet, though, so he decided to sleep on it and make a 
decision in daylight.  

Motels were so monotonous in design and decor that when 
Mulder inevitably woke at 3am, he had no idea where he was.  
Scully's absence from this bed gave him his answer quicker than 
he might have liked.  He rubbed his eyes and stretched, 
considering a late-night run to take some of the fight out of
him.  It had been a long day and sleep had never come easy or 
stayed for very long.  He swung his legs out from under the 
covers and as his feet hit the floor, he heard a familiar 
voice that had never been the harbinger of much more than doom.

"Agent Mulder, I presume."

The voice came from the dark corner and Mulder's heart leapt 
into his throat.  Such a disturbing turn of phrase, his mind 
gibbered at him as he fumbled for a gun, a light, something.

"I guess it's not really Agent anymore, though, is it."  The 
voice came into the stream of light coming from the parking 
lot, all blonde hair and white face and cold blue eyes.  

"Marita," he said, gasping a little.  "You scared the living 
shit out of me."

"Did I?  I apologize."  She walked over and turned on the 
standing lamp by the window, and shut the curtains all the way.

"I take it you got the message."

He nodded, the adrenaline fading slightly.  "We did.  I'm 
still not sure I believe it, though."

"You should.  You never did pay any attention to what the 
aliens were truly all about.  You just wanted to go after 
the conspiring hacks who made up 
the government."

Mulder wasn't quite sure how to respond.  "I always figured 
the aliens would take care of themselves."

Marita sat down on the edge of the other double bed, her 
slim figure barely denting the comforter.  "And they have.  
Much like we almost did so many times."  Her eyes darkened 
at that, and Mulder didn't have to guess what crossed her 
mind.  "We didn't think it wise to reveal everything in our 
message, though we're reasonably sure the danger has past.  
The war had been going on since around the time of Cassandra 
Spender's first disappearance, and they had begun to fight 
it on our soil and in our skies, as you're aware.  The 
rebels were eventually defeated and the plan we all knew 
about was in place and on schedule.  But another 
race came into the picture, around a year ago.  From what 
we've been able to learn, there was was a power struggle, 
and the new race won.  They have no desire for our planet 
or resources.  The plan for our eradication is totally out
of the picture."

Mulder pursed his lips and thought for a moment.  "How do you know 
all this?"

The corners of her lips turned up ever so slightly.  "Some of 
us have connections, Mulder."

"What kind of connections?"  It came out in an accusatory tone, 
his Bad Cop impression.

Her smile turned brighter.  "That's possibly the most 
interesting part of this whole thing.  It's not what you 
think," she added, seeing his expression darken further.  
"I've been working with Jeffrey Spender and some of your former 
colleagues at the FBI.  And don't underestimate the connections 
I managed to make while working with the Syndicate.  There were 
survivors who had ways of communicating with the aliens."

"Which colleagues?"  He ignored the mention of the Syndicate 
for the moment.  Mulder and Scully had only occasionally 
received word from Walter Skinner during their absence, and 
he'd never mentioned anyone from the FBI.  

"John Doggett and Monica Reyes."

He was more than surprised to hear that.  "They survived?"  

She nodded.  "I can't say where they are now, as they travel 
quite frequently.  They were the ones who passed on our message 
to you.  They've been working at disseminating the information 
to whomever needed to be told.  Without alternate forms of 
communication," Mulder wondered if she meant the Gunmen, 
"we have to rely on word of mouth."

Mulder brought his knees up and put his head down.  This was 
a lot to take in, and Mulder felt Scully's absence all the 
more keenly.  "You said you were working with Jeffrey Spender?  
And members of the Syndicate?"

"Yes.  They would hardly like to have their identities 
revealed, but these were not men you ever had contact with 
or even suspected existed.  Members from some parts of the 
former Soviet Union, and even more obscure places than that.  
I sought them out not long after."  She cleared her throat and 
paused heavily, as if giving a moment's silence to a memory.  
"Jeffrey you knew was still out there.  After your trial, he 
couldn't bear keep out of it."

She stood up and smoothed her jeans like she might have 
smoothed a skirt once.

"And he's waiting for me.  I apologize again for our method; 
old habits die hard," she said with no small trace of irony 
in her tone.  "There is someone who wants to see you, now 
that you're back."

"How do you know I'm back?"

"Mulder, the glint in your eyes is unmistakably.  
It runs in your family."  Her hand waved towards the door.

She reached into her pocket, sending a quick thrill of alert 
up Mulder's spine, and brought out a folded piece of paper.

"This is from Deputy Director Kersh."

"For me?"  Mulder's voice was full of derision.  Kersh had never 
been what one might refer to as an ally.

"Yes.  He wants to meet with you, and this is just directions.  
You've been away for quite some time, you know.  D.C. has 
changed some."

She walked to the door, turning around as she grabbed the knob.  
"Another thing, Mulder.  The world may not be ending any longer, 
but that doesn't mean there aren't things that go bump in the 
night. We're never truly safe, you know."  She pegged him with 
a stare for a long moment, and walked out the door.

Mulder got out of the bed altogether and made a bee line for 
his bag, because his immediate instinct was to call Scully 
and tell her everything, get her to analize all of it with 
him.  His cell phone was in the bag - and when he pulled 
it out, he saw the battery had given out.  

Instead of plugging it in and calling her while it was 
charging, Mulder stopped in his tracks.  It was after 3 
in the morning, and she was at her mother's place.  Undoubtedly 
she was detoxing from their life on the run.  She did have three 
years of his constant presence to flush from her system.

He sighed heavily, which turned into a yawn.  He would wait 
for the morning.

Mulder opened the folded piece of paper Marita had handed 
him, and found directions to what was probably a diner, 
an address that indicated it was in the District.  He knew 
the street but had never heard of the place.  In the corner 
was scrawled "8:30; do not be late."

He laid back on the bed and eventually dozed off, the 
lights still on.

-

"Scully, I hate to call and interrupt..."

"But you couldn't resist.  What's going on?  You sound 
exhausted."

"I didn't sleep much.  I had a visitor in the wee hours 
before dawn."

Scully sounded alarmed.  "A visitor?  Who?  What did 
they want?"

He was secretly glad she was worried.  "Marita Covarrubias.  
She was delivering another message for us."

Mulder told Scully everything he'd been told.  "I'm inclined 
to believe her, Scully."

She made a noise that sounded like agreement.  "It's 
intriguing, certainly.  Are you going to meet with Kersh?"

"I think I will.  Not like I got a lot of plans, you know."

The pause was awkward and Mulder was reminded of times in 
another life when that silence might have met with a quick 
hang-up instead of Scully's attempts to keep the conversation 
going at all costs.

"You could have come up here, you know."  Her mother was living 
in Baltimore.

"Nah, take your time.  You earned it, after all.  Listen, 
I've got to go.  Kersh said not to be late, and, well, 
you remember how he is."

Scully sighed the sigh of the long-suffering and put-upon 
lover who knew all too well that the conversation was, for 
now, at an end.  "Okay.  Take your weapon, Mulder."

He supposed it would have killed her to say "I love you."

-

True to Marita's word, Alvin Kersh was sitting at a booth in 
the diner, his hair more liberally flecked with gray and his 
jowls a little heavier.  

"Deputy Director Kersh?"  Mulder walked up and waited for the man 
to answer him.

"Mulder."  Kersh looked up from his paper and swept an appraising 
glare over Mulder's being.  "You look like shit, young man."

"Don't I know it, sir."

It was an odd exchange for two men with such enmity between 
them, but Mulder suspected from Kersh's glance that he, at 
least, had laid down arms for the occasion.  

"Sit down.  We have things to discuss."

Mulder ordered migas and Kersh stuck to coffee, and they 
enjoyed breakfast in silence for a few minutes until Kersh 
finally spoke up.

"You've heard the news, I take it."

"You know I have, or I wouldn't be here."

"Time was I never would have expected you to show.  Time was, 
I would have waited until dark and found you sauntering into 
my office or waiting for me at the elevator in the parking 
garage."

"Time was, I didn't know who to trust.  I still don't, but my 
years have been long and my patience short."  Mulder brushed 
his coat aside to reveal his pistol, to make a point with Kersh.

"So you haven't changed altogether.  That's good to know.  
Of course, if you had gotten sloppy, you would have been 
dead when the danger was still near."

Mulder drained his glass of orange juice and signaled the 
waitress for another glass. "I'm still not sure why I'm here."

Kersh took his glasses off and wiped them clean with a napkin.  
"The world doesn't need heroes, Mulder.  But it does need 
guardians, people standing in the line of fire and doing the 
dirty work.  You've been told that the threat is over, and 
so it is.  But there are other threats, and dirtier work 
to be done."

"Are you recruiting me to go back to investigating fertilizer 
purchases in the midwest?"

A smile.  Mulder had once believed Kersh's face was incapable of 
this strain.

"No, I'm recruiting you to run the X-Files division at the FBI."

-

"It's true, Scully.  Kersh led me down to the office himself.  
They're reopening the X-Files.  The division will be under 
Kersh, but I would have leeway to hire at least one other agent 
and have discretion over cases."

"There's a catch."

"I'm sure there is, but when has that ever stopped us?"

They were at a park in Baltimore, two weeks after Mulder's 
initial contact with Kersh.  Mulder had done plenty of wrestling 
with this idea on his own, but he'd come to the conclusion that 
being "back" meant finding occupation.  He'd never cottoned to 
the idea of teaching or doing something utterly unrelated to 
his background.  And even on the run away from their resources 
in Washington, they had seen plenty of evidence of the 
paranormal.  No one had been around to work those kinds of 
cases after they'd left; Doggett quit the Bureau and Reyes 
had been transferred out of the Washington office, 
and they'd poured their energy into solving the question of 
the supersoldiers and hunting down alien clues.  The 
division had closed and was mostly forgotten; just like 
before, after Arthur Dales, people gradually forgot that 
which they had never understood.

Except for Kersh.  The incident with Mulder and the trial 
was swept under the rug, though Kersh was never given another 
promotion.  He oversaw the Violent Crimes Unit and 
Behavioral Science, which meant that X-Files continually 
cropped up and were shuffled into an increasingly large 
"unsolved" pile.  When the opportunity came to get Fox 
Mulder and Dana Scully back, he made every effort to smooth 
the way.

Marita had tipped him off.  Mulder had learned, through 
various channels and old sources he thought had dried 
up, that she was the Syndicate now, if such a description 
applied.  She was the guardian of secrets that never need 
surface now, but she was also guardian of secrets she 
believed should be exposed.  When the threat of invasion 
was confimed past, Marita started a chain of events to get 
back the only two federal agents who had ever been brave 
enough (stupid enough?) to question the status quo and 
expose the lies.

It probably never occured to her that she'd only get 
one of those agents back.

Scully hadn't answered Mulder's question.  It had been 
meant rhetorically, but she was clearly musing an answer.

"Scully?"

She looked up at him, taking his hand in hers.  "I'm not 
going back."

The world spun and Mulder's hearing failed him as she 
explained all the reasons why.  

-

They kept in touch, at first.  A phone call here, an email 
there.  Once they met for dinner, and Scully told him about 
her job offer at Johns Hopkins, teaching forensics to 
post-graduate students.  He said something sly about it, s
omething stupid about wasted talent, and Scully's expression 
hardened because she knew that it was really just Mulder wanting 
her to follow him, wanting her to want to be with him.  

It baffled him, why that was such a bad thing.

After three months, the calls tapered off altogether, and it 
became sporadic emails, and no more visits or rendezvous.  

Mulder chased a vampire clan in Arkansas, and picked up a 
phone to tell Scully he thought he'd found Lucius Hartwell, 
but he dialed only four number before hanging up.

He rented an apartment even smaller than his old one had 
been, and had less of a life than he had then.  But he worked 
with a renewed spirit that Scully would have recognized for 
self-defense and Diana might have thought unhealthy zeal.  
He didn't hire anyone for almost two years, and only then 
because he'd broken a leg in an incident with a rabid dog 
and a faith healer.  Kersh had generally left him alone, 
but came to Mulder's hospital room to lecture him on his 
"advancing age" and inability to do all things at once.  

"Advancing age?"  Mulder was incredulous.

Kersh just raised his eyebrows and looked pointedly at Mulder's 
graying hair to drive his point home.

Mulder went through two or three agents, never really convinced 
that he wasn't being made fun of behind his back by each one, and 
wished like hell that Scully would have listened to reason.

They saw each other once, in the airport.  Scully had grown out 
her hair and looked satisfied, if a little tired.  Something only 
Mulder would have known. It was nothing, she demurred.  

"I'm fine, Mulder.  I've done okay without you."

Damn, those words stung.

-

  
Once, in the beginning, they were in the Arctic investigating 
something that had gone wrong in the Ice Core Project, and they'd 
been locked in a room together.  There was this moment of pure 
heat - Mulder had grabbed Scully and rubbed her neck, presumably 
to be sure she wasn't infected, but really to try and tell her he 
was who he was.  He thought that if he touched her, he could 
communicate with her.  Convince her.

It was a method that worked for their entire partnership, and it 
had carried into their coda roaming around the country.  

But she wasn't close now; Mulder had reverted to sleeping on a 
couch just to avoid waking up in a bed without her by his side.  

He'd once told her she made him a whole person.

He was beginning to wonder if he'd underestimated her power.

-

"Agent Mulder."

So weird, hearing those words fall from someone's lips again.  
Especially those lips.

"Walter."

Skinner smiled.  "You can call me Skinner if it makes you 
more comfortable."

Truth be told, Mulder didn't think he would ever get used to this 
man in front of him being an equal, a civilian instead of FBI.  
But he smiled back and tipped his beer in a salute.

"I didn't think I would ever see you again."

"I didn't either.  But the powers that be, well, sometimes 
they knew when they'd gone too far."  Skinner gestured to 
burn scars on his left arm; they'd done a much better job 
covering those on the other arm and his face.  

"I wish I could..."

"Don't."  Skinner waved him off.  "We were all pawns, 
Mulder.  In someone's big scheme and we couldn't so much 
as make a decision to shit that they didn't somehow know 
about or manipulate."  Mulder grimaced at the imagery and 
Skinner shrugged.  "You know that's how it was."

"Yeah, I practically wrote the book on it."

They chatted for awhile, catching up like the old colleagues 
they were, only with a decidedly more colorful history than 
any other patrons in the bar that night.  Skinner saved the 
million-dollar question for the end.

"So where's Scully?  I would have thought she'd be here with 
you, telling you there's no such thing as ghosts just as one 
materializes behind you."

Mulder had to laugh at that; it might have been the beer.  "She's 
saving the world in an entirely different way, molding young minds.  
I haven't talked to her in ages."

"Uh-huh."  Skinner gave Mulder the "I know more than you do" look 
that Mulder had long recognized in his informants and occasionally 
in the Assistant Director who broke more rules than he kept.  

"What do you know, Skinner?"

"She's saving the world, just like you say.  But I thought you knew 
she'd taken a job at Maryland General, as a resident. She's a 
regular doctor now, just like her father always wanted."  He 
didn't tell Mulder about how Maggie Scully had suffered a heart 
attack last year and passed away, how Bill Scully had been sent 
to the Mediterranean to fight the war and how Scully was keeping 
it together by overworking and refusing to have a social life.  
They were so much alike, and 
stubborn to their cores.

"Well, good for her."

"You need to call her, Mulder.  She said the same about you.  
Call her."

Mulder took another swig from his beer, Scully's last words to 
him ringing in his ears.

"Yeah, well.  I will."

Skinner fixed him with a patented surly glare, and they changed 
the subject.

Mulder never did make that call.

-


The world didn't end.

Scully watched the news every night with a silent unacknowledged 
desire to find disaster, something to call her back to Mulder's 
side in an instant.  But it was all the usual chaos, nothing that 
she and Mulder would have been called to work on.  She tried reading 
between the lines but her old instinct was rusty, and she didn't 
have the heart to second-guess every Hanta virus tale she heard.

She willed him to call, willed the phone to ring at ungodly hours 
and her door to shake with his knocking just as her eyes finally
closed after a long day.  She longed for nights in motels, sweaty 
between the sheets, guns with the safeties off and sitting on the 
nightstand just in case they hadn't been careful.  

She tried once to go on a date.  It was a disaster from the 
beginning, she was never really into the conversation or the 
dinner or the wine.

She tried going to a firing range, she tried driving as fast as her 
car would let her on open stretches of highway.  Tried skydiving 
once and got a broken wrist to show for it.  

Her mother died and it was a lonely funeral, so many people who 
called her Dana and whispered about the prodigal daughter.  Scully 
went every week to leave flowers, but really she went just to feel 
like she had some company.

But the world didn't end.


==============================================================

END.

Yeah, I'm expecting to get a lot of flak here.  I didn't bring 
them back together.  I intended to, but the story went a different 
way.  So angst and separation are the themes tonight.  
I think I'm going to eat some ice cream.

Feedback is always lovely.  texgoddess@yahoo.com

All my fic is at http://users.pdsys.org/~maidenjedi
