From: Windsinger@aol.com
Date: Fri, 28 Jul 1995 19:50:00 -0400
Message-Id: <950728194959_125369571@aol.com>


Please archive for me. Here's part 1a of Wedding version B (tell me
what you think after you've read it. I think it's good but you have to
have read most of the rest of the Generation series first.)


THE WEDDING, version B or What Mary Anne calls the Action/Adventure
Wedding.
By Susan Esty (Windsinger@AOL.COM) 
Occurs within the series GENERATIONS by Mary Anne Cullinan
(macspooky@erols.com)
June 26, 1995

Rating: PG-13 for lusting thoughts.

Synopsis: Mary Ann has created a wonderful series of fun Scully
family stories centered around Mulder and Scully's courtship and
marriage. This is an alternative wedding story created with her
input and permission full of humor and silliness, tenderness and
angst. Just for fun guys!!!! Wrote this one on my vacation.

Author's notes: Mary Anne and I started conversing on AOL and found
out we lived only one county away from each other near DC. She sent
me her Scully family stories and I fell in love with their fun and
spirit. One day Mary Ann said she couldn't figure out how to do a
wedding story without sex (her kids read her stuff so she tries to
keep them clean) so that's how the idea got started. While I was
germinating my idea, she got one of her own so we ended up with
two. (Then she went and added sex to hers after all. ARG! Not
fair!) "Let's send them in to Scinut together!" Mary Ann said. "Are
you sure you don't mind," I said hoping she wouldn't mind because
I really liked my idea and I wanted to borrow her ready-made Scully
'family'. "Sure," she said. Well, give me an opening and it becomes
an epic. So here it is... It's for fun and with respect and CC
would never film it anyway. 


This story is based on the characters created by Chris Carter, Ten
Thirteen Productions and Fox Broadcasting. Used without permission
and no infringement is intended. Thanks guys (unisex personal
pronoun intended), for creating this marvelous stuff.

Copyright 1995 by S. Esty

The Wedding, version B: The Action Adventure Version
Chapter 1: Preparations

     Dana Scully was in heaven. She was stretched out on a chaise
lounge by a blue pool belonging to a Scully family friend. It was
a perfect, sleepy Sunday afternoon for sun bathing and she had all
of her family about her... her family and her fiance. August in
Washington meant miserably hot and sultry days at the office,
especially since the window air conditioner in their basement
office did not work very well. Cases were light, though, as if even
the bad guys had decided it was too hot to make the effort.
     The warmth had sunk down into Dana's bones and she felt
wonderful, probably needed more sun block, though. Rolling over and
sitting up, she began shaking out the bottle of #30. Her eyes
strayed over to the opposite side of the pool where Fox Mulder
slept on the flat smooth cement slabs that edged Jason MacIver's
pool. She smiled at the sight of him, but winced at the neon orange
and green trunks he had bought for the occasion. She missed the red
Speedos, but guessed he felt uncomfortable wearing them in front of
her relatives. Sighing, as she smoothed the lotion on her legs, she
wished he was awake to do her back. She liked the feel of his
hands. She should wake him anyway to renew his own sun block for,
though his hair was dark, he had the fair Scottish skin which,
without attention, would soon start resembling raw steak. 
     <I'll let him sleep a little longer,> she thought. <Heaven
knows he gets little enough most nights.> She only wished the
reason for his lack of sleep was that they were making passionate
love long into the night. Unfortunately, it was only his insomnia.
She smiled, appreciating the beauty of him. He was hers, all hers,
or would be once she could get him to decide on a date for their
wedding. But he was hesitant, Dana knew, frightened even. Marriage
was not something he had ever considered. For a reason unfathomable
to her, he had actually thought no woman would ever want him. He
had been joking when he had asked her to marry him, but she had not
been joking when she said 'yes'. 

     Jennifer, little Dani's mother and Dana's bother Chris' wife
came from the direction of the house. "Gran, there's a call for
you... Dr. Granite."
     The ninety-year-old woman raised her head from where she had
been dozing in the shade of one of the pool's umbrellas. "'Bout
time," she grumbled and began the process of moving her old bones
from the chair. "How long does it take for these doctors just to
admit that a body is old?"
     All pairs of eyes around the pool with the exception of those
belonging to seven-year-old Eileen and the zoned out FBI agent
watched the old woman maneuver herself from the chair and begin
shuffling up the path. Any of them would have been willing to help
if she had looked like she either needed or wanted any.
     Dana exchanged looks with her mother in the adjoining chair.
"She wants to die in Ireland," Maggie Scully told her youngest
daughter, "and I don't think she plans to return to the States
after this next trip home. She wanted so to see you and Wolf get
married."
     Dana smiled at the nickname her grandmother had given Mulder.
Foxes were too sneaky, the old woman had said.
     "Mom, you know... Fox is hesitant about this."
     "Is he still refusing to... " Dana's Mom let her voice train
off. "Mom!" Dana said in a half-whisper, coloring.
     "I just don't like to see you unhappy. In this day and age...
I'm just sorry I ever told him those stories about how your father
wanted you to wear white at your wedding."
     "Mom, there was no way you could have known Fox would be so
sentimental."

     Dana knew there was more to it than Fox wanting to honor her
father's memory. The memory of his own father and unhappy - no,
miserable - childhood made him apprehensive about creating his own
family. He had heard and seen first hand the results when abused
children grow up to abuse their own wives and children. He knew he
had a temper, but Dana never, never, could see him ever being
capable of such cruelty and loss of control. If only she could
reassure him. She had certainly tried, but she did not want to push
him. Dana was afraid, however, that the longer he waited, the more
time he would have to think up new reasons for not marrying her. 
     For she knew he loved her. Unfortunately, he was also happy
with their lives the way they were. And sex... if for some reason
it did not work out, did he think that if they had been intimate
there could be no turning back?

     Maggie patted her daughter's leg. She knew there was more. She
had seen Fox dealing with his demons. 
      Jennifer returned, walking slowly, the red-headed Dani on her
hip. Maggie looked questioningly up at her. "What's the news?"
     "Not good, Mom. The Doctor agrees that this should be her last
trip. Just old age, nothing they can do."
     Maggie sought Dana's eyes. Both knew what she was thinking.
"Maybe she can delay her departure for a couple of months," Maggie
pondered.
     Dana felt the pressure. As if a couple of months would get Fox
Mulder off his guilt trip long enough to marry her. 
     "No, I just heard her talking to the travel agency." This came
from Maureen, Bill Jr's wife who, seven months pregnant, had
waddled out, following Jennifer. "She made reservations for
Sunday."
     "Sunday!" All of the Scully's and McBride's had drifted over.
Only Fox slept on. 
     "What about the wedding?" Sinead exclaimed. "I wanted to go to
a wedding that wasn't my own so I could enjoy it."
     All eyes were suddenly on Dana. "Ooooh , no...," she protested
weakly knowing a gang up when she saw one. "There's not enough
time."
     "Sure there is, if we all help," Melissa offered.
     "It's August, it's Washington, I'll melt!" Dana had always
wanted to be married in the fall. She had been thinking about a
nice day in late October when the leaves were turning and it would
be cool but not cold.
     "Believe me," Anita, the wife on Dana's youngest brother,
Kevin told her in all sincerity, "you won't remember the weather.
Maybe it's a good thing you and Fox haven't done anything. That's
probably all you will remember."
     "Anita!" That from her husband.
     Dana stared around at the guilty looks on all the faces over
the age of ten. "Does everyone know about this?"
     Seven-year-old Eileen plopped herself onto the lounge chair
with Dana, looking more like five than seven in her pink ruffled
bathing suit. She *was* petite and no one expected her to grow to
be much taller than Dana. The family joke was that there had been
a minor potato famine the year Eileen was conceived, but everyone
was too busy watching the soccer finals on the tube to notice. 
     "I don't understand," the child said. "What do they mean that
you and Fox don't do anything together? I see you do lots of things
together." There were many stifled giggles.
     Dana hugged the child and took her into her lap. "Never mind,
dear. I take it you would also like to see Wolf and I get married?"
     "Yes, yes," the child said. 
     Dana shook her head. "Fox is still determined to have a big
wedding, like Dad wanted. I still don't think there's time -"
     "Like Melissa said, we'll all help. I can arrange for the
caterers, that doesn't take much running around." Anita rubbed her
round stomach.
     Kevin, her brother in the Navy as their father had been,
offered, "I'll see if I can get the Londontown Gardens."
     Dana's eyes grew wide and then soft as she looked at her
brother. He smiled back at her. Yes, he remembered. He and Anita
had been married at that beautiful old Colonial estate. It sat on
a bluff overlooking the Chesapeake Bay in Annapolis. The spot was
very popular with the Naval Academy crowd. During a quiet moment
after the wedding, Dana had told her brother that she wished when
the time came that she could be married there. At the time she had
not thought that that experience would ever be hers, that she could
ever find anyone who would respect her whole person, brain and body
both. Oh, yes, and her stubborn streak. Two months after Kevin's
wedding, Dana Scully was assigned to work with a eccentric,
unpredictable FBI agent named Fox Mulder.
     "It's booked surely," she told her brother, but despite
herself she was beginning to get excited.
     "Only way to find out is to ask," Kevin said, having seen the
light in his sister's eyes and turned towards the house. "Oh, and
I'll check to see if Father O'Toole, the Naval chaplin, is
available."
     With Kevin gone Dana looked at his wife, Anita. "But what
about the bands? What about the classes? The Catholic Church is
strict - "
     Anita smiled comfortingly. "Oh, that's not a problem. The
Catholic Church bends over backwards for the Navy. If you remember
Kevin and I had to move ours up suddenly because his ship was
needed in the Gulf. They can pronounce the bands over three days
instead of three weeks and Father O'Toole often gives all those
prenuptial classes in one afternoon."
     Dana looked in Fox's direction. He slept on. "But Fox wanted
a church wedding."
     "Only because he thinks that's what Bill would have wanted,"
her mother said. "The Gardens are as good as a church. Better. Bill
would have approved. Fox will, too, when he sees them."
     "We'll need an alternate site," her brother Bill mused, "in
case of rain." Being the oldest, Bill Jr. was the practical one.
     Melissa snorted. "In August! The only rain we're likely to see
are late afternoon thunderstorms."
     "What about a dress? I know mine would never fit." Maureen was
Bill's wife and the mother of seven year old Eileen, twelve year
old Michael and expecting another. Maureen was a sturdy five foot
seven and had always been well endowed.
     Automatically, Dana answered, "I guess I could wear one of my
beige suits." 
     "You will not!" Melissa said horrified. "You live in those
suits."
     "I could rent one -"
     The clan heard a loud whoop from the house and a few seconds
later Kevin came jogging out. "They have a cancellation!" he called
before reaching the crowd gathered around Dana's chair. "Someone's
orders were changed. Ten A.M.next Saturday. Yes!"
     Everyone started babbling at once.
     "Yellow? With her coloring?"
     "Green, then. Dana didn't you say you always wanted ivy in
your bouquet. What about Ivy and white roses."
     "Pink!" Eileen's little voice said. "I want pink!"
     "- and baby's breath, of course. Lot's of baby's breath for
Gran."
     "I met Maggie what's-her-name at the Maryland Renaissance Fair
last fall. She produces a lot of tapes for local Celtic bands."
     "Yeah, and she lives in Annapolis, too. She can find us
someone who's available."
     "Corned beef and cabbage -"
     "Oh, and Father O'Toole says he can rearrange his schedule -"
     "- cake. Dana, what kind of cake? Boring white or chocolate?"
     "Carrot," Dana managed to interject.
     "Carrot? In the summer? Well, I guess we could keep it on
ice."
     "I don't like nuts," Mike sulked.
     "Keep Wednesday afternoon open for the prenuptial marathon."
     "Will Walter let them off?"
     "He will." This from Maggie.
     "- Wedding night -"
     Giggles from Jennifer and Anita.
     "Maureen's father knows the manager of the Maryland Inn in
Annapolis -"
     "Very fancy..."
     "That will be booked -"
     "- they keep a special room available for the President,
Washington VIPs and such. Maybe we could get that?"
     "For two of the FBI's finest, why not?"
     "Just don't tell them Spooky's nickname, they have trouble
enough as it is with ghost stories."    
     "Bridesmaids - pale green?"
     "- what we can find, Jennifer."
     "Pink, I want pink!"
     "Shorts and halter tops," snickered a male voice, "it will be
hot enough."
     "Gran's as happy as she can be, you should see her grin. She's
already called Uncle Justin and asked him to Fed-X the great
heirloom McBride wedding dress."
     "Better insure it to the max!"
     "Invitations - "
     "Too late to mail -"
     "Kevin and I will deliver the local ones -"
     "Will they be pink?"
     "Phone tree for the out-of-state?"
     "Do you think Fox's mother will come?" 
     "Fox?"
     All heads swiveled in the sleeping man's direction.
     <Fox? Oh, shit...> Dana had forgotten about him and the sun.
Now she was going to have to deal with a Fox Mulder who had a first
degree burn over forty-five percent of his body at the same time
she had to tell him about her family's plans for him. 
     "Think someone should tell, Fox?" Chuck asked what everyone
was thinking. 
     "Who wants to?" Maureen asked.
     "Who dares to?" Bill wondered.
     Kevin and Chris exchanged conspiratorial glances and then
looked over at the unsuspecting bridegroom. Slowly, they got to
their feet and started moving stealthfully towards the sleeping
man.
     <Uh, oh.>
     Dana knew what was coming and sensed potential disaster in the
wind. She sprang to her feet and headed off her two brothers.
Mulder was not the most accomplished in hand-to-hand combat, but
having a tendency towards paranoia, for good reason, his reflexes
were excellent. Except perhaps for Kevin, he could take any one of
them easily and Dana did not want to see any of her brothers
crushed up against the pool fence with a half-awake FBI agent at
his throat. 
     "I wouldn't startle him if I were you - " she warned. Then she
grinned. "Let me wake him for you first."
     She crouched down beside this beautiful man of hers, lifted
his sunglasses and ran a finger over his cheek. The muscle twitched
once, twice and then, without opening his eyes, he smiled. 
     "Comfortable?" she asked.
     "Very," came the sleepy, contented response.
     "Ready to take the plunge?"
     His eyes came open blearily as he gave her a confused look.
     Dana kissed him quickly on the lips, then stood up and stepped
back, hands on her hips. 
     "He's all yours, boys."
     Kevin and Chris who had been joined by Chuck and Bill
descended, each grabbing a limb and lifting. Fox didn't have time
to react.
     "One -" Kevin counted as they swung their victim.
     "Dana!"
     "Two -" Chuck continued, the momentum of their swing building
up.
     "Com'on, guys -"
     "Three - " Four male voices shouted together simultaneously,
releasing wrists and ankles.
     Fox went sailing through the air to hit the surface of the
pool with a loud SPLAT! 
     The sparkling waters of MacIver's pool closed over his head.

===========================================================================

From: Windsinger@aol.com
Date: Fri, 28 Jul 1995 19:50:09 -0400
Subject: Re: The Archival of you Gener...


part 1b of The Wedding version B


/** This is part 1b of The Wedding, Version B. (Am I ever sorry I
named this story this way!) ***/
     
     For the next two hours, family prevented Dana and Fox from
getting any time alone. He spent the first fifteen minutes after
his dousing looking stunned. To Dana's relief he did not seem
angry. She even heard him laughing later with the other young men.
>From the sound of it, they were planning his bachelor party. It
warmed Dana's heart to think that Fox had brothers now. 
     Dana was dressing later, in preparation for heading home, when
she heard a gentle knock at the door. 
     It was Mulder, dressed already, if putting a pair of shorts on
over his trunks could be considered dressing. His front was
definitely red and probably too tender for a shirt. 
     "Does it hurt?" she asked, sympathetically.
     He shrugged. "Not too bad."
     "We'll stop at a drug store on the way home and get some
Solarcaine."
     Gingerly, he put his arms around her and kissed her with deep
affection. 
     "You okay with this? Do you mind?" she asked. "It just sort of
- happened."
     He touched her cheek. "I felt a little left out at first, but
I understand. It's actually easier to have the decision out of my
hands." He touched a curl of her red hair. "There was never any
doubt that I loved you."
     A shiver ran through her and the room was not cold. "You
missed all the preparations," she said, apologetically.
     "Are you happy?" he asked, nibbling the skin of her throat.
     She let out a long sigh. "I'm happy."
     "Then I'm happy."
     "Will your Mom come," she asked hesitantly.
     "In your dreams. My Mom doesn't travel any more."
     She hugged him carefully around his chest. He felt so good in
her arms. "Oh, I'm having O'Brian's bring in some ribs and barbecue
for the reception."
     "Thanks," he muttered nuzzling her ear, "the cabbage at
Sinead's wedding gave me gas for three days."
     She laughed gently. "I know." 
     He pressed her suddenly with strength and a passion that
surprised her. 
     "Fox... what's got into you?"
     "It's what I'd like to get into you..."
     Playfully, she hit him across the chest with a towel.
     "Ouch! Well, I *was* wishing I hadn't made that promise."
     "Only six days to go. You know *I* want to, but I don't want
to be responsible for you breaking your word." She looked into his
beautiful eyes which stood out even more brightly in the glow from
his sunburned face. "What's different?"
     "I guess I finally realize you're serious. That you really
want to marry me."
     Her stomach twisted. How could he have doubted it. "Oh, Fox -"
     Something may have happened then. Hands touched, explored,
clothes began to disappear, hearts were pounding and sweat
glistened. He had pulled her unresisting down to the floor when
there came a gentle tap at the door.
     Dana swore under her breath. Fox laughed gently to hear her.
"Who is it?" she called.
     "Eileen," came a little, soft voice.
     They stared at each other. "Just a minute, honey."
Reluctantly, they pulled apart and reassembled their meager
clothing. 
     Fox dropped onto the bed and put a couple of beach towels in
his lap as Dana opened the door and Eileen came in. The little girl
moved with her shoulders slumped and her dark-haired head down.
     "What is it, honey?" Dana asked, taking the sad little girl in
her lap and sitting with her close to Fox on the bed.
     "I don't have anything to do for the wedding." It was obvious
the little girl had been crying.
     ""Of course, you will," Dana said. "What would you like to
do?"
     "I'd like to be a flower girl and wear a pink dress."
     "Then you can do that," Fox said, softly moving over a little
so she could sit between them. Of all of Dana's relatives he had a
special place in his heart for Eileen. She was nearly eight and the
only one with dark hair. 
     "Mommy says I'm too old," she started to cry again, but softly
and struggled for control. 
     Fox picked her up, stood her before him, and looked at her
with great seriousness. "We'll find you something, Eileen. Would
you like to carry my ring for Dana?"
     "That's for babies -"
     Fox paused and then slowly put one of his long hands gently on
the head of dark curls. "Not as a ring bearer. There's another way.
Eileen," he said and repeated for emphasis, "Eileen, this is very
important -"
     Eileen looked up at him with great seriousness.
     "Would you be my best - person?"
     The great blue eyes of the little girl held a solemn,
wondering expression. Dana's looked very much the same.
     "A man when he gets married usually asks a special male friend
to stand with him. I don't have a lot of friends - "
     Dana felt at that moment as if her love for this man would
overwhelm her, as if the true meaning of the word had finally
driven home... overwhelm... unable to be contained. "Fox, you don't
need to do this. Surely someone from the office... a relative..."
     "My relatives? You are my family now and Skinner will insist
that we keep any actual wedding a secret as long as possible. There
isn't anyone anyway." His bright eyes sought hers and their
expression said it clearly enough. <Only you.>
     Dana felt her own eyes fill with tears as he turned his
attention back to the little girl.
     "Anyway, Eileen, I can name a special person, a special
friend, to stand at my side when I get married and I couldn't hope
for anyone better than you."
     Eileen put her little hand in her large one. "It's because I
remind you of your sister, isn't it, Uncle Wolf? The one you lost."
     It was Fox's turn for his eyes to turn misty. Someone had told
her.
     "Do you mind very much? Be my Samantha for me?"
     She huddled against his chest and he didn't flinch away,
though it must have hurt. "Can I wear a pink dress?"
     "Samantha liked red, but pink is close enough."
     The little girl, danced out of his arms, all smiles now. "Oh,
boy, I'm going to be a best person!" She ran out of the room. "Wait
till I tell, Mike!"
     Dana took the hand that the girl had held and kissed it. "I
love you, Fox Mulder."
     
                               ***

     The week was full of activity but manageable because Dana and
Fox left so much up to her eager relatives. Melissa would be Dana's
Matron of honor, a title that irritated her to no end. 
     <Ditz brain or not,> Fox rationalized, <she is Dana's only
sister.> 

     All the women plus Eileen and Tim and Sinead's four year old
niece Katie, who was going to be the flower girl, went shopping on
Monday night and came back giggling with bags and boxes and
whispers. Fox had just returned from his tux fitting with the men.
He owned one but it was a black and winter weight and he knew he
would never survive in August with that. Both groups met back at
Chuck and Melissa's place in Bethesda so that the couples could
pair off and return to their respective homes.

     Tuesday, Fox had dinner at Dana's but ate pretty much alone
and then did the dishes, as she spent most of the time on the phone
with one relative or another.

     Wednesday, he and Dana spent the afternoon and evening in
Annapolis for the prenuptial classes the Catholic Church required.
They could have foregone them, but for Gran's sake and Maggie's
they participated. They reviewed the simple ceremony with Father
O'Toole, a straight-backed, white-haired, fortunately liberal
priest who had been a chaplin in World War II. Dana and Fox had
only one disagreement with the ceremony and on this one point they
were very firm; they both refused to swear to raise any children
Catholic. They were not saying they would not, but Fox's family had
not been religious and Dana, herself, did not practice regularly.
Something about the steely stubbornness in the eyes of both of
these young people induced Fr. O'Toole to give up the point without
protest. Let them fight it out with the Lord Almighty when the time
came.
     The highlight of their day was a visit to the Gardens for a
brief rehearsal. The grounds of the Colonial estate were beautiful
and both approved of the site traditionally used for weddings which
overlooked the Bay and was hemmed around with well-shaped boxwoods
and lush with flowers. 
     After the priest was gone, after the sun had set, the two
stood with their arms around each other's waists and gazed out over
the broad expanse of the Chesapeake Bay, watching the lights of the
town and the academy come on and twinkle like stars as night
neared. 
     "I guess this is why they invented the word breath-taking,"
Dana mused. "The next time we leave here we'll be married. Are you
ready?" she asked again. She was still afraid she was rushing him,
but did not want to stop.
     He pressed her body close to his. "We've already broken the
news to Skinner once. I'd hate to have to do that again." He smiled
and kissed her on the top of her head. "I'm ready. I think I've
been waiting for this since the day I met you, I just didn't
realize it until now." With their arms entwined, they walked back
to their car.

     Thursday, Fox was coming back from a briefing, which had been
cancelled at the last minute, to find the door to his office
closed. Without thinking he breezed in and was greeted by a
swirling cloud of satin and lace and three female shrieks.
     "Close the door and turn around this minute," Melissa's dulcet
tones ordered.
     "Ex-cuuuse me," he said in cool, measured tones, "but this
happens to be my office." He did, however turn to face the wall. 
     "Excuse *us*," Jennifer said coolly, "but this is the only
time we have to finish fitting Dana's dress. Bad enough we had to
sneak in here because no one at the Bureau is supposed to know
about the wedding."
     There came a rustle of crinolines and satin. "You were going
to be at that briefing until two o'clock," came Dana's voice more
kindly.
     "They cancelled, so shoot me."
     "You're lucky," Melissa said, "we're just finishing and Dana
isn't wearing her gun at the moment."
     "Then can I please be alone with my wi- with Dana, please, for
a moment?"
     Reluctantly, Melissa and Jennifer moved to the door. 
     "We'll wait outside," Jennifer said to Dana curtly.
     "Don't you dare look, Fox Mulder," Melissa warned. "It's bad
luck to see your bride in her dress before the wedding."
     "Me? Superstitious? You must be kidding."
     Dutifully after they left, Fox kept his back to Dana but his
eyes on the glass panels of an ancient barrister's bookcase they
had 'saved' from an office on the fifth floor undergoing
renovation. The dark interior and the glass front acted like an
only slightly blurred mirror and gave him an image of Dana. She had
been beautiful dressed, but she was now hastily undressing. And
this was even better. He had seen her undressed before, but never
watched her undressing and never wearing such fascinating, feminine
clothes. There was the dress, of course, and under that a full
petticoat of taffeta and netting. Under that a hooped slip and
under that a long full slip that reached well back her calves. He
felt his pleasure center constrict as he saw her next in something
he had only seen before in Dana's Victoria's Secret catalog or in
some of his better adult videos. It was a corset in satin and lace,
with lacing and garters and white stockings... <Oh, Dana... >
Suddenly, he wished more than anything else in the world that is
was Saturday evening.
     "Scully," he began without turning around. It was always
Scully at work. That was critical. "I did see it for a moment when
I came in, the dress, I mean. It's not white is it?"
     "It's ivory, Mulder," came her voice behind him.
     "But it's not white. I promised your father."
     "Mulder, it's an old dress. A really old dress. It's ivory.
Anyway Mulder, we, as a couple, may be a virgin but separately,
well, Mulder, I hate to tell you this, but I'm not a virgin and I
know very well that you aren't."
     "Who told?" he asked as if injured, then continued more
seriously. "It's just that we've sacrificed so much."
     "We have," she said, and her voice was sad. He felt bad about
that. The decision on their waiting before becoming physically
intimate had not been hers.
     "Maybe I *am* being old fashioned."
     "Losing your resolve, Fox?"
     "If it bothers you."
     "After waiting so long, I can wait two more days. I have to
admit, I've gotten adjusted to the idea and it certainly is a story
I want to tell my grandchildren. They'll never believe it. Now quit
looking into that glass-fronted bookcase and tell Melissa and
Charlotte they can come back in."

     Thursday night the women took Dana to the Hanger Club. The
gyrating men in the tiny jock straps were gorgeous, but Dana sat
smugly sipping her white Russian, confident that hers was better
still. 
     Fox went out with the men and by all accounts hit every
topless bar in D.C. Both Fox and Dana called in sick Friday
morning.
     Friday afternoon the skies opened up and it rained a hot,
sticky, summer rain. Friday evening it rained as the remnants of
tropical depression Hillary settled over the region and stalled.
Friday night it rained. Saturday morning at six A.M. when Dana's
alarm woke her to get ready for her wedding, it was still raining.

===========================================================================

From: Windsinger@aol.com
Date: Fri, 28 Jul 1995 19:50:21 -0400
Subject: Re: The Archival of you Gener...

part 2a 

THE WEDDING, version B or What Mary Anne calls the Action/Adventure
Wedding.
By Susan Esty (Windsinger@AOL.COM) 
Occurs within the series GENERATIONS by Mary Ann Cullinan
(macspooky@erols.com)
June 26, 1995

Chapter 2: THE DAY
                                

     A damp Fox Mulder knocked at the door to Dana's apartment at
six-ten, and receiving no immediate answer, let himself in with his
key to find her curled up in bed in a blue funk. 
      "It's my wedding day," she moaned. "Melissa said we didn't
need a alternative site. 'It never rains in August.' Yeah, sure,
Melissa."      
     Fox sat on her bed and rubbed her back. She was dressed in sky
blue pajamas. He thought she only wore those on assignments.
Practical, and not very sexy. He never thought she wore them at
home on a regular basis. 
     "John from the travel office has a sister who works for the
weather service," he told her. "I talked to him last night. This
should pass over by early this morning."
     Fox switched on the Weather Radar channel on Dana's TV and
they saw easily the large glob of green and yellow still over DC
and Annapolis but moving steadily northward. There was a clean line
of delineation just south of the city.
     "Looks promising," Fox told her hopefully.
     Dana was too depressed to be willing to cheer up that easily.
She trudged back to the bedroom and collapsed face first on the
bed. "But what's behind it? This is Washington, Mulder. It's
August. It will be like moving in a tropical rain forest without
the benefit of shade."
     Fox lay down beside her and kept rubbing her back for a long
time, trying to comfort her.
     They both must have fallen asleep then for the next thing they
knew the phone was ringing. It was Melissa.
     "Dana, where are you? I thought we were meeting for
breakfast?"
     "Eight o'clock! Oh, shit, we fell asleep."
     "We?" 
     "Not a word, Melissa, not a word. Let's skip breakfast. We'll
just meet you at the Gardens."
     Dana struggled out of bed, looked out the window, stared and
then smiled. It wasn't raining any more and the sky was a brilliant
blue. Dana threw open the window and they stood side by side and
breathed in the fresh, cool air, such air and such a sky which
Washington had not known since May.
     "See it's going to be a beautiful day."
     "This is not our kind of luck, Mulder."
     "Fate must have taken a day off or maybe it's just her wedding
present to us. Let's enjoy it and not ask too many questions."
     Dana snuggled against his shoulder and they were quiet for a
time. "Thanks, Mulder," she said.
     "For what?"
     "For marrying me and not wimping out. I know how hard it was
for you."
     "I didn't even think about it."
     She looked up into his contemplative face, eyebrows raised.
"Never?"
     "Well, maybe yesterday morning, but I was pretty hung over at
the time." Kissing her gently, he broke away from her and picked up
a bag he had brought in with him. "But instead of going back to
bed, which is what I really wanted to do, I went to the mall and
bought this." He drew out a present the size of the shirt box,
wrapped in shiny silver and white paper. "Is it okay to give you my
present now? I want you to be thinking about it."
     Dana's eyes grew huge and she nodded numbly as she took the
box. "I guess Miss Manners isn't here to say 'No'." Dana could tell
from the box and the tissue paper as she opened it that whatever it
was, it was from Victoria's Secret. She drew out a slinky nightgown
in dark green silk with spaghetti straps. Simple and elegant. Her
face was a picture of wonder, delight, and anticipation. "Ooh, ah."
     "I guess the lady likes it. Is that anything like 'cool'?" he
asked smiling. 

                               ***

     Fox Mulder stood squinting in the sunlight. He could ear the
gulls and the lap of the waves below the bluff. With his eyes
closed, he could be back home on Martha's Vineyard, but he had
never felt like this at home. Never. Never this happiness.
     He opened his eyes and the scene was set before him like
something from a movie. The garden was fresh clean from the rain
and neatly trimmed. His groomsmen - his brothers - in their dove-
grey tuxes were seating the few guests. It did not bother him that
there was no one there just for him. He had not really asked
anyone. The priest had readied his few ceremonial objects, the
stole, the salt, the ointment, the cup. 
     Only a few more minutes... Fox looked for Eileen. She should
be with him. Ah, there she was with her brother. She had squirmed
half way through a rail fence and was reaching for some pink wild
flowers that grew just on the edge of the bluff. The fence was
there for a purpose, signifying danger. Beyond there was a long
drop to the Bay below. 
     "Eileen! Michael!" Fox called. As he strode up to them, his
new dress shoes slid a little on the wet grass. "What were you told
about going near the edge?"
     "I told her!" accused twelve year old Michael, "but she
wouldn't listen. Wanted her old dumb flowers." He went to join the
other men, leaving Fox and Eileen alone.
     Eileen had extracted herself from the fence when she heard her
Uncle Wolf's disapproving voice and now looked down at the ground.
Slowly she picked up the little nosegay of ivy and white roses she
had been given that matched that all the other girls carried. "I
wanted pink to match my dress."
     "You look beautiful as you are." At that moment, Fox heard the
tinkle of a little bell and, looking up, saw coming across the
grounds a procession of women in mint green picking up their
dresses over the damp ground. "Eileen, they're getting ready to
start. Will you take arm, lady? It's time for us to take our
places." 
     She took his hand gladly and suddenly he was twelve years old
again and holding Samantha's hand as they raced on the beach. In a
silly grown-up moment, Sam and Fox had talked about getting
married. Both agreed they never would, not if it meant losing each
other, not if marriage was like what their mother and father had,
not if having children meant doing to their kids what their father
did to Fox.
 
     In only a few steps Fox was standing to the left of the
priest. And he realized he was sweating, even though the day was
not hot. He had faced mutants, and serial killers and aliens and he
had never been as nervous as this. But is was a good nervous. The
lonely time in his life was passing. He would never be lonely
again. He was loved. He would have Dana to wake up to every
morning, Dana to love. 
     And suddenly there she was. At his side, Eileen gripped his
hand. "She's beautiful," his little Samantha whispered to him. And
Dana was like an angel walking toward him across the green lawn,
smiling. The light from the green emerald earrings he had given her
for her birthday danced in the sunlight. 

     Neither of them remembered much about the actual wedding
except each other. It had been such a long time coming and both
knew, professionally, it was the biggest mistake they could ever
make.
     Fox looked down upon her quiet beauty and felt he had finally
come home. And he had gained not only Dana, but a place where he
belonged, and a family with people who were happy to see him. 
     Dana felt the shadow of the beautiful, lonely man standing
beside her and felt her heart would break for joy that he had
allowed himself to take the chance to let her love him. <It is not
only you, Fox.> She had wanted to tell him, but never had. That she
had been a geeky girl, tied to her books, afraid men would be put
off when they found out she had half a brain, afraid to be
feminine. Nothing had clicked for her until she encountered his
quiet acceptance.
     Oaths and 'I do's', kisses and rings were all traded in a
daze. Only his hand in hers and hers in his mattered in the end.

                               ***

     The reception was held on a distant part of the same grounds.
It was a huge party of laughter and food and old customs, bad
jokes, usually in the form of sexual innuendos, and music and
dancing. Fox surprised everyone by showing he had found time during
the week to have Kevin and Bill teach him two of the more intricate
Irish couple dances. Everyone said that Dana was more relaxed and
happy than they had ever seen her. Over all, however, Dana and Fox
moved in a world of their own... a touch of his hand on her neck,
a touch of her fingers on his, eyes blue and hazel touched each
other's bodies. Little touches, but constantly moving.
     Fox took the diminutive Gran onto the dance floor. He just
held her up and they swayed to the music. She felt like a child in
his arms. He leaned down when she whispered to him. "You come to
Ireland soon," she told him. "Before I go, I want to show you where
the Banshee's took my Brendan."
     "I will," he promised, and he meant it.
     Suddenly, she pinched him on the arm to get his attention.
"But don't you come until you get Dana Katherine good and knocked
up. Eileen's waitin' for that baby cousin and you don't want her to
be too old to enjoy her."
     Fox muttered, noncommittally. A baby with Dana? Yes, someday.
But not right now if they could help it.
     Late in the afternoon Fox and Dana danced again to the
beautiful melody "If Ever You Were Mine" which Fox had first danced
with Dana at Sinead's wedding. He had thought, then, that such
happiness would never be his.    
     "It's good that we waited," he said to her, holding her as
close as if they were one spirit. "Now when we think about this day
it will all seem more real."
     "There's one problem, Fox," she whispered, her head under his
chin, "Like Anita said, I'm afraid the only thing I'm ever going to
remember about this day is waiting for tonight."
     "That's why they're video taping it," he said and they both
laughed.
     They had had each other for some time and they had their
quest, but now they had one more thing - by committing themselves
to each other they now had the future, a future to build together,
goals to set and plan for and a helpmate to see them through. Even
Skinner's serious expression, as he stood by Maggie, could not
dampen that. 

     Finally, it was time to go. The reception had lasted a long
time, longer than the receptions for most weddings. It was four in
the afternoon by the time the band packed up. The presents were put
in Maggie's car who would take them to Dana's. Dana and Fox did not
seem in a rush to leave. To the hot-blood young pairs this seemed
odd but not to  the old married couples who swore they could see
the heat in Dana and Fox's eyes. Even while they moved among the
large and boisterous family, they had only to look at each other to
be, spiritually, deep within the throes of passion, far beyond
foreplay, and enjoying every minutes of it.  
     "Hope, old Fox can keep it together till they get into their
room," Bill Jr. told his wife Maureen. At that, she snuggled next
to him and looked with liquid eyes into his face. Fox and Dana's
example was contageous. Both were willing to bet there would be
many happy beds that night.  
     Michael suddenly came up to his parents, a scowl on his face.
"I can't find her anywhere," he sulked.
     "Eileen? Isn't she with Katie and Tim's relatives."
     "Nope."
     "In the boxwood maze?" his mother asked.
     "Not there either. I've looked everywhere. Dumb girl."
     Maureen's eyes began to look a little worried. "Bill?"
     He walked up to the last of the party-goers. 
     "I'm sorry," he asked in a raised voice, "but has anyone seen
Eileen lately."
     Fox and Dana stepped forward from where they had been loading
the last of their things into Dana's car. "Not for an hour at
least," Fox said. None of the others had seen her either. The group
spread out quickly to search.
     Maggie took Dana's arm. "You two go on ahead. We'll find her.
She's probably playing Scarlet O'Hara in the house." 
     As Maggie went in that direction, leaving them alone, Fox
passed Dana a look of concern. He helped bundle her with her dress
and all its skirts and petticoats into the car, then stood by the
open door for a moment thinking.
     "Fox," Dana said knowing how gently knowing how attached he
was to Eileen, "they'll find her."
     But he had not heard. His head was cocked to one side as if
listening to some inner part of him. "The flowers!" he shouted
suddenly, and began racing across the large green yard in the
direction of the formal gardens where the wedding had been held.
Dana knew that look, had come to respect it with her life. <Dear,
God, no!> 
     She scrambled out of the car took a few stumbling steps in the
soft ground with her high heels then kicked them off. She picked up
an overflowing armload of skirt and train and crinoline and began
running after the retreating figure. Frantically, she looked around
to yell for anyone else to come to help. She saw only Skinner
coming around the corner of the main museum house with Maggie.

     Fox ran and cursed each time he slipped on the wet patches of
grass. It was such a long way. He was grateful he was in good
condition, but still he felt he could not go fast enough, feared he
would not be there in time. Even before he reached the spot he
heard a child's tired screams for help. His heart tightened in
panic. <Samantha? Oh, no, I refuse lose you again.>
     He saw the railed warning fence and a flash of pink beyond,
low towards the ground. Without a pause he vaulted over the fence
and slid to a stop. Eileen was lying splayed on the ground too
near the edge of the bluff, her little body slipped half way down
a slick section of muddy ground that had given way under she small
weight. The heavy rains had made the ground more than soft. By her
right hand, abandoned, was a handful of pink wild flowers. She
raised a muddy face full of exhaustion and panic, now tinged with
hope. She reached a trembling hand toward him. 
     "Wolf!" she shrieked...
     Even as he shouted "No!"...
     Even as she began to slip further over the edge, over the edge
beyond which he knew was a fifty foot, nearly perpendicular drop,
down a slope of rock and brush to the bay. 
     There was no choice, there was no time to think, there was no
other help. He slid down the muddy slope to her side and grabbed
her small body up into his arms.
     Beside her near the edge, there was a small outcropping that
looked like rock. Fox hoped it was, hoped it would hold his weight.
It did not. Even as he clasped her to him, he felt the ground shift
under his feet. Even then he could have saved himself, if he had
dropped her and dropped to the ground himself close beside her.
They probably would have stuck long enough for help to arrive for
he knew Scully was following - <Scully! Dana!> - but that was never
a consideration. With all his strength he threw the child from him
as far up onto the safety of the bank as he could, heedless of the
fact that by doing so he lost almost any chance he ever had of
keeping his balance. The rest of the bank he stood on gave way.
Frantically, he took a long step forward, but the soles of the new
shoes where too smooth and the mud like glass. He fell backward
through the air... seemed to sail for a long time looking only at
blue sky... felt a tremendous agony in his side as he hit a hard,
rough but glancing blow against rocks and earth far down the slope
that spun him about and forced every bit a air from his lungs. 
     He gasped, just as the muddy waters of the bay closed over his
head.  

===========================================================================

From: Windsinger@aol.com
Date: Fri, 28 Jul 1995 19:48:18 -0400
Subject: Re: The Archival of you Gener...


This is The Wedding, verison B part 2b (does that make sense? It's
the end!)

     Dana ran on, encumbered by the copious dress and her bare
feet, but she ran. Fear gripped her as she realized she had not
seen Mulder for some time. He was tall, she should have. He could
only have gone to the spot where the wedding had been held, but he
had shouted something about pink flowers. The memory of Eileen
smiling in her pink dress made it all seem to make some sense. At
the entrance to the boxwood hedge that enclosed the wedding site,
Dana paused only long enough to pick up the sound of a child's
sobbing. On the far side of a split rail fence, her arms wrapped
around the lower rail for dear life, little Eileen lay sobbing, a
mass of mud, leaves and sticks.
     Dana dropped down on the damp ground next to the girl and with
gentle coaxing got the child to let go of the rail long enough for
Dana to pull her through and take her into her arms. Eileen clung
to her aunt and cried with even greater force, nearly hysterical.
     "Mulder?" Dana called, standing with Eileen wrapped around her
neck refusing to be dislodged. Louder, "Muullderr!!"
     No answering cry. Nothing. 
     "Eileen!" Dana asked the child with concern. "Eileen, you must
stop crying. You have to tell me... what happened? Have you seen
Uncle Wolf?"
     "He threw me," cried the girl between her sobs. "He threw me
on the ground. He scared me." And indeed the girl was rubbing her
scraped forearms where there did seem to be some blood mixed in
with the mud. Dana's mind whirled. Fox would never hurt Eileen. 
     Beginning to sense something very, very wrong, Dana shook the
child slightly. "Where is he, Eileen?" The child just clung tighter
to the woman whose beautiful dress was now dirtied from holding the
very muddy girl. Eileen shook her dark curls, Dana realized, more
in misery than in fear. "Eileen, you *must* tell me, where is Fox?"
     The girl twisted around and pointed towards a spot beyond the
fence where the edge of the bluff touched the sky. "He fell. Uncle
Wolf fell..."
     Nearly in a panic now, adrenaline pumping, Dana thrust the
little girl from her and wrapped the girls arms around the rail of
the fence on the safe side now. "I have to help Uncle Wolf. You
must be a brave girl, you *must* stay here until a grown-up comes.
Do you hear me, Eileen?"
     The girl nodded solemnly as Dana climbed awkwardly over the
fence and within four steps was standing to her ankles in soft mud.
Frantically, she scanned the ground. Now that she looked it was
easy to see where the ground had been torn up very recently. The
small bouquet of pink flowers nearly at the edge told her that
Eileen had been down there, near the edge. That's where she had
gotten so muddy. There was nothing like that kind of mud hear the
fence. 
     "Fox!" Dana cried plaintively, somehow not expecting an answer
now. She got as close to the edge as she dared, saw how fresh rocks
and muddy earth had been recently dislodged. Her eyes followed the
line down, down the impossible slope to the water's edge where a
patch of water, muddier than the rest of the rain-muddied bay, was
fanning out five feet from shore at a point directly in line with
her. 
     "Oh, no, oh, no, this can't be happening!"  Frantically, Dana
looked around but saw no help.  She took one second to think and
only one. Fifty yards to her right, there was a series of steep
steps leading down to a dock. Too far, too slow. She felt the
weight of the dozens of yards of material. She could imagine it
pulling her down into the water, no help to either of them. She
could remember the dozens of pearl buttons Melissa had fastened.
<Damn.> Without hesitation she took hold of each side of the
plunging bodice and pulled, in her haste ripping the ancient lace
and satin down to her waist like so much dry paper. "Don't do this
to me, Mulder... " she hissed, almost like a mantra, continually
looking down into the water, expecting to see his head come up.
Nothing. She threw off the dress, the crinoline petticoat and hoop
following swiftly, leaving her in the long white slip, corset and
stockings. "Stop kidding around, Mulder, this isn't funny." No
movement on the distant bank. One last time she looked around.
Skinner was just running up to the fence, his face red with effort.

     "Take care of her," Dana yelled, pointing to Eileen. "Get
help!" and without another word Dana launched herself over the
edge, but her size and low center of gravity were an asset here.
She kept low and upright as she let herself slide down the rain
softened slope in a controlled fall, felt the mud rise up knee deep
in places. 
     There was almost no way to tell, now, that the waters of the
bay had been disturbed.

     Skinner took up the frantic girl. Eileen came easily to any
protective human now, having just been rejected by two of her
favorite people in all the world. He took note of the ground and
the steps to his right that Dana had seen to the dock. Despite
Eileen becoming nearly hysterical again, he clambered over the
fence with her to stand near the pile of discarded wedding finery.
This was as near to the edge of the drop off as he felt he could
safely go holding Eileen. But he was in time to see the bride of
only a few minutes before, now dressed in little more than a muddy
slip, dive into the bay. 
     Skinner had seen enough. He returned to the fence and was
relieved to find Kevin and Bill just coming up. Remembering only
vaguely that Bill was the father, Skinner put the weeping child in
his arms and then grabbed Kevin by the shoulder and in his most
authoritarian voice ordered, "Get someone to call the rescue squad.
I think we have a potential drowning victim with injuries. Then
follow me down to the dock with as much help as you can find. And
we're going to need blankets."

                               ***

     Dana was so tired. After her seventh or eighth dive she had
touched the cloth of his trousers, only he was too heavy with water
and she was too short of air to lift him. The next dive she lost
him again, but found him on the one after and, though her lungs
were near to bursting, she would have died before leaving him
again. Now she had him near the surface, but the water was over her
head and, though she had worked as a life guard in high school,
none of her practice 'victims' had so little natural buoyancy and
their lungs were not filled with water as she was sure Mulder's
were. Tread water was all she could hope to do and try to keep both
their heads above water. 
     Dimly she heard shouts, then splashing nearby. Skinner was at
her back trying to take Mulder from her. <No!> Then Kevin was
there, the Navy man, her brother, forcing her from Mulder, helping
her to the dock as Skinner and another, Dana realized later it was
Chuck, followed with Mulder. "Support his spine!" she only managed
to croak before six pairs of willing hands quickly and carefully
pulled Fox Mulder from the water and laid him on the sun-warmed
dock. In a moment Dana was kneeling beside him, dripping and
shaking, but the only doctor in the group. 
     She found a pulse, thready but she had felt worse... but he
was not breathing. Mechanically, she cleaned the dirty water and
sea grass from his mouth. Tipping back his head, she pulled out his
jaw to and gave the prescribed two quick breaths to ensure she had
an airway. <Damn.> She had done mouth-to-mouth before, but this
time it was so much harder for his lungs were partially filled with
water. His chest barely rose. 
     <Support the neck, roll the victim on his side, two sharp
thrusts with your fist between the shoulder blades, support the
neck, roll him on his back again, five deep breaths. Repeat.
Repeat. Repeat the litany until the paramedics come... Mulder...
breathe, damn you.> 
     Ten members of her family were now on the dock all wanting to
help, wanting to ask what had happened, but afraid to ask.  All
helpless.

     Dana began to sway before she allowed Skinner to take over the
mouth to mouth. He may be a desk jockey now, but he had kept up his
CPR training. Dana sat back on her heels, a grimy, soaking woman in
a long, tattered, muddy slip, staring at Mulder's still face. The
sound of a boat motor distracted her and she looked up to see an
old waterman coming alongside the dock in his long, low oyster
boat. 
     "M'am is that your husband?" he called to Dana.
     She looked blearily at him. "No, he's my part-" That was when
it hit home, really hit home for Dana. "Yes... he's my husband."
     "Well, I saw it all from my boat, M'am. He's really made of
some stuff, that one is. I hope he's going to be all right. Why no
sane man would have gone out onto that bank the way he did, but he
did. And when he started to slip, did he let go of that little girl
to save himself? He did not. He threw her up on the bank even
though he must have known a move like that would send him straight
down."
     Dana held her breath trying to force the hyperventilation
induced faintness from her brain. Why was she not surprised? She
expected as much from him. She touched the unresponsive cheek and
indicated to Skinner that she would take him on again.  As she
moved into position beside Mulder, his dove-grey rented tux wet and
muddy, and he lying absolutely still, she muttered under her
breath with both tears and anger, "But I don't want a dead hero, I
just want a live Mulder."
     "I called 911 by the way, from my cellular," the old waterman
said patting the incongruous instrument in his shirt pocket. "My
wife won't let me go anywhere without it."

     Dana touched his forehead brushing the muddy forelock of hair
before she leaned down to breathe into his mouth, the mouth that
she thought would be kissing her into passionate silliness by now.
She checked the airway again, gave him five deep breaths, turned
him on his side and delivered the two quick thumps on the back.
There was still no response. As she supported his head to return
him to his back, she heard far over the hill the familiar sounds of
sirens. Never had she thought she would hear them on her wedding
day.
     When she leaned down towards him again, she noticed for the
first time some movement. She saw the slight undulation just as it
began to escalate into a full convulsion, just seconds before Fox
started choking. Deftly, she rolled him onto his side again, just
before he threw up on her already wet and muddy slip a liter or
more of the disgusting muddy water and most of the remnants of what
he had eaten at the reception. She held his head and rubbed his
back and spoke to him soothingly.
     As he choked up the remains of the water, she asked, "You
going to live, Mulder?" Feebly, he nodded his head and as it seemed
that he had thrown up about all he was going to she helped him lie
flat on the dock again. She wanted more than anything to take him
into her arms, but there was still the slight chance of spinal code
damage so lying flat was safer. 
     Someone handed her a pile of pink linen table napkins which
she recognized from the reception and she used these to wipe his
face. The waterman had provided some buckets and several of her
relatives began bailing the warm bay water over the mess to help
clean it up. 
     "Scully?" Fox asked shakily. His eyes were nearly rolled all
the way back into his head. He obviously had no idea what was going
on.
     "It's all right now, Mulder. You saved Eileen, and fell down
the embankment and into the Bay. At our wedding..."
     It took some time but finally his eyes focused. "Wedding?"
said the raspy voice. "Scully, stop kidding around..."
     At that a terrified look settled over Dana's face. What if he
didn't remember? Short term memory loss? He'd had it before, but
not to remember their wedding? For a moment, as exhausted as she
was, the trauma of the last few minutes came home and Dana thought
she was going to cry. 
     "Dana," came a soft voice below her. "I'm sorry... I
remember..." And there he was, looking sorrowfully penitent and
obviously in his right mind. He had just been trying to make a
little joke.
     "Mulder, I'm going to kill you," she growled as only Agent
Scully could.
     He tried to sit up then, but, instead, he grabbed his right
side, his face twisted in pain. "I think you've already tried," he
gasped.
     Concerned, Dana began unbuttoning his shirt and felt the
sadness overwhelm her again. Eight members of her immediate family
- now also his immediate family - where still clustered within a
six foot radius. "I had hoped to do this in a more private setting,
Mulder."
     His eyes were on her, warm and sympathetic. "This isn't
exactly how I'd envisioned it either."
     By now she'd gotten his tux shirt open and pulled up the t-
shirt underneath. There were a lot of bruises already beginning to
show up, and one angry, red welt on the right side of his rib cage.
He raised his head trying to see, but that brought on a fresh gasp
of pain. "What do you see?" he asked between clenched teeth.
     "I think you've damaged yourself again, Mulder."
      He let his head drop back onto the dock. "Rib?"
     "Looks like it," Dana told him. They looked at each other then
and both knew what that meant - no honeymoon for them that night.
They heard the rescue squad coming down the steps with a basket
stretcher.
     "Dana, I'm so sorry," he apologized, staring with love and
sorrow into her face. "I'll make it up to you."
     "You better be damn good, Mulder," she whispered into his ear.
     He gave her one of his famous wry smiles. "I *am* damn good,"
he returned just before the paramedics pulled them apart to perform
their examination.
     The procession up the long steep steps from the dock was a
slow one. Fox was pale by the time he was pulled over the top of
the bluff. The swinging basket litter made him sea sick.
     The senior paramedic looked at Dana and the man in the
stretcher as they waited for the truck to be pulled as close as it
dared. "I'm positive they are going to want to hold you over for
observation, sir... what with that rib and the antibiotics they'll
want to give you for the Bay water on your lungs. You took quite a
fall. They'll also want to do a CAT Scan for spinal injuries, but
you were lucky. At the moment you look better than you ought."
     Fox fought down the nausea and the headache and the
disappointment which was more painful than the broken rib and
figured he must looked better than he felt. 

     Standing in the shadow of Skinner's arms, Maggie seemed more
distraught than Dana who, knowing their luck, somehow was not
surprised by all this. "But it's her wedding night..."
     "Maggie," Mulder called signaling with a raised hand in her
direction, unable to move his head because of the cervical collar
they had strapped him into. "Have someone call the Maryland Inn.
Tell them the president can have his room back." After a pause.
"Scully?"
     "I'm here, Mulder," she said moving around so he could see
her.
     "See if you can get them to send me to GW. They know me there.
Maybe they've got a honeymoon suite."
     "Not likely Mulder, but a good try. And, hey," she said
softly, "I don't mind. I'd rather have a live hero than a dead hero
any day."
     "What about a live, fully functional husband?"
     "That's a toss up, Mulder."
     
     They drove him off to the Anne Arundel County hospital. Dana
would have gone, but, looking down at the last minute, realized
that she was wearing nearly nothing but a clinging wet slip.
     Following the tracks of the rescue squad, lifting the torn
remnants of the muddy slip, Dana caught sight of the old lady
standing near the entrance to the boxwood hedge, the armload of
ancient heirloom wedding dress in her arms. Only then did Dana
remember ripping it off before she charged down the muddy bank.
     Gran reached for her hand as if she would support Dana instead
of the other way around. "I'm sorry about the dress, Gran," Dana
apologized. "I tore the lace and the satin and the mud will
probably never come out -" 
     "Nonsense, my child. When the lacemakers and dressmakers of
Limerick hear this story, they'll be happy as punch to fix it for
free. And as for a few stains, it's an *old* dress, Dana girl. Now
it has just got a few more stains on it and a rocking good story to
go along with them." The old lady took Dana's arm and they began
walking slowly over the green lawn towards where Dana had parked
her car. She had a few things there, the jeans and t-shirt she had
arrived in plus her honeymoon clothes... and one totally useless
green silk nightgown. Well, maybe not totally useless. The hospital
rooms had doors didn't they? Maybe she could help take Mulder's
mind off his injuries. Hopefully, they wouldn't drug him up too
much. 
     "I'm afraid none of your girls will ever be able to wear this
dress, Dana," Gran continued. "Not without a lot of alterations."
     Dana gave the old lady a questioning look.
     "Why they are all going to be too tall, child," the old woman
said with a grin.
     Dana smiled. "Thanks, Gran. But I don't know... with Wolf's
luck we'll be lucky if we ever have a chance to make any."
     "Oh, you will, child," Gran said, knowingly. "You definitely
will. And you are going to have a very interesting life."
     Dana attempted a brave smile. "I never doubted that for a
moment."

The End - MacSpooky's Generation Series continues. I don't know if
this 'alternate' time line will have its own series of stories or
not. Kind of depends on feed back and priorities between this and
my own Revelations series. THE ABDUCTEE will be out momentarily and
there are sequals and prequals to write.

Windsinger's REVELATIONS series (not related to the MacSpooky's
GENERATIONS series at all):

1.   Revelations (in the works as if 7/95)
2.   THE BOX (On Ftp.cs.nmt.edu)
3.   THE VACATION (This is just a working title so far. I only have
     a vague outline about this one.)
4.   THE ABDUCTEE (posted 7/95)  
5.   MILE HIGH (Situated in time before MEMORIES but please read
     after MEMORIES. MILE HIGH will be out immediately after THE
     ABDUCTEE is posted.)
6.   MEMORIES (On ftp.cs.nmt.edt parts 01, 02, 03. Note: There is
     another story on this site with extension .TXT which is not
     mine. Sorry about the identical titles. I try to check these
     things out.)   
7.   JUST THE TWO OF US: Under construction as of 7/95 (Wonder if
     this or Revelations will be finished first? I certainly don't
     know.) 
8.   SKUNKED AGAIN: probably. Great title, though.
     
     
     Not in REVELATIONS:
     DO NOT GO GENTLE (on ftp.cs.nmt.edu)
     DELIVER US FROM EVIL (posted 4/17)
     WEDDING, version B (The Action-Adventure Version) in
     MacSpooky's GENERATIONS series and with her spirit and
     support. (posted July 1995)
     WALKERS (working title: There's already a fan fiction called
     'Walker'.) Coming late in the fall.


