From: dev1025@uswest.net
Date: 23 Jun 1999 23:17:39 -0700
Subject: xfc Korena, Korena  Part One of Four

From: <dev1025@uswest.net>

TITLE : Korena, Korena
AUTHOR: Katvictory
RATING : PG -13
DISCLAIMERS: Chris Carter owns every one in here
except the denizens of Deweyville, TX. There is a
Deweyville, Texas but this Deweyville and
all it's people are my creation. I ask that Mr.
Carter not sue me, I'm only borrowing. I don't get
paid for this, so he probably won't even notice.
SUMMARY: Mulder and Scully visit Deweyville, Texas
to help a young woman investegate a series of
abductions/murders.
CATAGORIES: X-File, Angst
THANKYOUS: So I don't forget again - None of my
stories would make it this far if I didn't have
the help of a lot of people. Thank you so very
much , Amy, Mori, and Laurie. You make these tales
readable. Donna --  here's a big thanks for the
web sites and a bow to you as the " Supreme
Mistress of Medical Fanfic." We all stand in your
shadow.



Korena, Korena
Part One of Four
By Katvictory

FROM THE WEB SITE
"THE TRUTH IS IN HERE"
www.9339tofight.com

The town of Deweyville sits on the Texas side of
the
Sabine River, 9 feet above sea level. All 9 feet
is composed of silt and sludge, the debris from
when the floods come. It makes for fertile farm
land. But the people in the town are poor, dirt
poor to use an old cliche. On either side of town,
both north and south, are the vegetable stands.

Before my abduction, I used to work at my
family's southside stand during the summer. I
hated it.
I would rather be out playing, riding my bike,
digging for crawfish -- anything but sitting
behind
the whitewashed board that served as our
counter, and weighing tomatoes, peas and corn for
the customers.

Kristy, my little sister, took over my spot, after

I could no longer work. She hates it, of
course. I can't blame her. If I was 16, and looked

like Kristy, I'd hate it too. Kristy found
the first victim. We had seen the signs that they
were back. It was a cool summer for Southeast
Texas, cool and rainy, just like it was that year
I went missing. Kristy remembers how it was.
That's why, when she waited too long, jawing with
Pumpkin Boutee and Larry Williams, she didn't want

to take the short cut. It was after nine.

Nights come quickly in the Big Thicket. What
little bit of twilight there is, is cut off by the
trees.
But it started storming. She walked part of the
way down the highway, but when the bright, jagged
lightning split the purpled, bruised sky she ran.
She ran down by the stream.

That's when she saw Skeeter Claraday, or what was
left of him. She said his moaning is what caught
her attention. She heard his whimpering
moans and left the path. She admits she didn't
know what she thought she'd be able to see. She
saw more than she wanted to. She was almost upon
him, when a big bolt shot across the sky. Night
turned to day for a moment. And my little sister
saw him. She saw what had almost happened to me.

Skeeter was covered with a thick green gel. Under
the goo, he was melting.

***************

It's hard growing up with my name and being an
alien abductee. Of course, no one really believes
I was abducted, nobody in this town anyway. It
happened the summer before my 15th birthday.
Everyone thinks I was grabbed by some perverted,
rapist psycho. Especially because of the way I was

found. To everybody, the proof that I wasn't
abducted was it happened only once. Everyone knows
aliens keep coming back for more, so it had to
have been the pervert that took me off my bike
that day. I know they figure no perverted rapist
would take me now, not even a psycho one -- not
the way I
look.

I grew up to the chant, "Korena, Korena, where'd
ya go last night? ET took you, now your face is a
fright." The lyrics have varied. They all hurt.
But I'm strong. I've made it this far, haven't I?
Most of my time is spent on the Internet. That's
where I met Fox Mulder. The minute he confessed
his real first name, it was love at first byte. I
never thought I'd ever really see him, or that
he'd see me. I'm not good at first meetings, or
second, or any of them. Not when I have to meet
someone face to my ruined face. I'm kinda shy that
way. This is the story of how we met and of my
first X-File.

***************

The pictures told the story. Fox Mulder studied
each shot, imagining what it must have been like
for the girl. The first was a school  photograph.
She had been pretty. Fourteen is an awkward age,
but there was great promise of  a certain
loveliness yet to come. Her eyes were what
mesmerized him. Even before the pain, she had
the eyes of an old soul. Wide, deep blue, almost
violet and knowing. Did they see what was to come?

Is that why, even though there was a practiced,
pasted on, smile for the camera, her expression
was
solemn?

In every picture he had of her, she had that same
expression. Even the cheesecake one on the
bearskin rug. She'd only sent him snapshots of
herself from before the abduction. She'd given him

carte blanche to her medical records, so she knew
he had seen her as she now was -- scarred,
confined to a wheel chair, barely able to
breathe.Maybe she'd only sent the old photos,
because that is how she
wanted him to picture her. Perhaps it was her way
of saying this is the real me.

Sadly, the Korena Brooks he envisioned when he
thought of her was NOT the smiling school girl.
What he saw in his mind's eye were the photos
from her medical records. Stark black and white
images, grizzly color shots showing how much pain
a human spirit could endure and still survive.

"Mulder, am I supposed to be on 87?"

Dana Scully's question pulled him from his silent
study.

"What?"

She gave a small sigh and pulled to park on the
shoulder. Dana knew this case was special for him.

It was Important, with a capital "I." It was his
quest, but it was more. It was the girl. Korena
was a woman, now, or almost so. But to Mulder she
would always be a little girl who had been stolen
from her family.

"Tell me," Scully requested, deliberately
softening her tone after seeing his eyes. She knew

he'd been looking at the pictures again. The ones
in the file. Scully handed him the Texas road map.

" Aren't we supposed to be on State Highway 87? I
think I missed our turn-off."

Mulder opened the oddly-folded chart and attempted

to get his bearings.

"Let's see, Interstate 10 to 12 then on to 87.That
should put us about...ah, we should be there." A
quick glance around confirmed that where they
were, was not there.  Squinting, he glanced at the
map
again, "What road are we on?"

Scully sighed. They were coming upon the little
town, Deweyville, but in order to find Korena's
house they needed to find Highway 87. They stopped

at the local mercantile, Claybar's, and grabbed a
much-needed drink. Using the down time, they
studied the directions Korena's grandmother
had sent for her house. The instructions had
arrived regular mail. The elderly woman would not
touch a computer -- religious beliefs.

"Mulder, are you sure we shouldn't be staying at a

motel? I feel strange, you know, staying at a
civilian's house."

The agent allowed a wry grin to cross his lips at
his partner's term -- "civilian."

"Scully, I've been writing to this woman for three

years now. I know her. She doesn't mind. You can
take it for a couple of days, can't you?"

Scully shot him a reproachful glance, "I can TAKE
it, Mulder. That's not the problem..."

She stopped short, seeing he was not listening. He

once again had his nose in the files.

"There, there's the short cut Korena talks about.
That goes by some little stream." Mulder was
pointing at a well-worn path that had been
paralleling the highway but turned into the thick
cluster of pine trees, just past a wooden bridge.
That's where Korena was found and Miller
Claraday's remains were discovered by Kristy
Brooks."

Dana remained silent until she made the turn onto
the washboard dirt road, " And Miller..."

"They called him Skeeter," Mulder offered. "I
don't think too many people even knew his real
name."

"Skeeter," the agent repeated with a shrug.
"Skeeter was the victim they found the substance
on. The gel that matched what Korena had inhaled?"

Mulder nodded. "Both were analyzed, both came back
as a caustic substance -- chemical composition
unknown."

Scully sighed again, "No, 'not of terrestrial
origin?' Mulder, I'm disappointed. We're on this
case on such flimsy evidence."

"We're on this case because Korena asked us," the
agent murmured softly.

Scully felt her cheeks redden, "Sorry, I..." She
quickly caught his eye, wanting him to know she
meant her words, " I'm sorry."

She received a slight grin in answer and saw
forgiveness in his eyes.

"Is that it?" Scully asked, pointing at a
ramshackle trailer, almost hidden in a clump of
trees. The agent hoped not. If it was, sleeping in

the car was going to be her preferred choice.

"No, I think that's where her dad lives. He
drinks," Mulder replied, disgust lacing his voice.

"No doubt,"

The house was beyond the copse of small pines. It
was a large, country farm house, looking homey and

lived in. A huge, screened porch spread
almost entirely across the front. Dogs barked
announcing their arrival and an elderly, big-boned

woman made her way down the steps, coming to greet
them.

"They're here Beena!! Kristy, Beena! They're
here!" Elizabeth Brooks trumpeted toward the front

door. She hurried down the walk and met the agents

at the gate. Mulder was immediately grabbed in a
tight, warm hug. "You are a long, tall drink of
water," the woman exclaimed, holding the man at
arms length to take in his lanky frame. "Don'
anybody feed you?
Don' worry, Maw-Maw's here."

Mulder noticed a tall, long-legged, teen hanging
back behind a bush in the yard. The girl offered
him a shy smile. That would be Korena's little
sister,
Kristy, Mulder realized. Elizabeth released the
agent and turned her attentions to his partner.

"And what a pretty little thing. You look like my
little sister, Annie, God rest her soul."

Scully suffered the quick embrace with good grace
and they followed the Brooks' family matriarch
back to the house. "Sonny! Red! Go get these
people's things outta the car!"

"No, I can get the..." Mulder began, pivoting to
return to get their luggage.

"No, those lazy boys can do it," Elizabeth stopped

him and ushered the pair into the house.

****************

Mulder had waited for this moment. Dreaded it too.

He didn't realize it, but he handled it well.
Korena
searched his face and saw no horror, no revulsion,

a touch of pity perhaps, but he hid it well. She
was
impressed. She liked him. That had been her
biggest
fear -- that she would finally meet him and be
disappointed. Life was like that. It rarely met
one's
expectations. Fox Mulder was one exception. He
walked straight over to where she sat in her
wheelchair and gave her a big warm hug. He even
had tears in his eyes to match her own.

Dana Scully also handled their first meeting well.

She was more distant, more reserved in her
greeting, but they hadn't been writing each other
for three years. The conversation quickly turned
to the case, which didn't bother Korena one bit.
It helped them get used to each other and gave
them a topic of conversation.

Maw-Maw left Korena to her company, retiring to
the kitchen to begin the task of fattening Fox up,

and the boys, after dropping off the luggage, went

back outside. Mulder, Scully and Korena began what

was to prove to be the first of many power
meetings.
Kristy, as always stayed back, watching and
listening.

Korena went over what she knew of the three most
recent victims. The first, of course, had been
Skeeter. Kristy helped fill in the blanks, telling

what happened, both before and after she'd ran to
get help. Scully quizzed her on whether the man
had actually been alive when she'd left him.
Kristy replied he had been groaning. She knew he
was still alive.

The records the agents had acquired showed that
there had been little left of Skeeter by the time
the authorities arrived. The caustic, viscous,
substance had disolved all of his soft tissue and
most of his bone, leaving behind a puddle that was

primarily the unknown gel mixed with a bit of
primordial soup that had vestiges of the
victim's DNA.

There was even less found of the other two . Oly
Riley had gone missing eight days after the Miller

boy. It was assumed that the addled old man had
gone on a pre-dawn fishing excursion and either
injured himself, somehow, or perhaps simply
wandered off. He had been known to do that on
occasion. He was, after all, 94. A day and a half
later,
a local man had found a pool of greenish sludge
near
the back of his pasture. What frightened the
discoverer of this grizzly mess was the odd-shaped

piece of metal that lay undisolved in the middle
of  the puddle. It resembled a sculpted human hip
bone. Medical records showed that Oly had hip
replacement surgery in 1990.

Last week,  just four days before, Lisa Phillips,
8, had been seen playing in a field, not a quarter

of a mile from where Oly had been found. When
she didn't return home for supper, a massive hunt
was begun. The pasture, in fact every field and
pasture from Kirbyville in the north, to
Deweyville
in the south, and west out to Vidor was searched.
The town dragged the river, beat the bushes,
combed the woods. No sign of the child was found.

A full day and a half later, just at twilight, a
passing
motorist saw a flash of light cut through the
trees that
lined the road. He stopped, wanting to
investigate.
The moment he stepped from the car, he heard the
scream and the frightened, high-pitched wailing of
a
terrified child. He ran toward the sound,
fighting through the thick undergrowth that lined
the banks at that part of the Sabine. By the time
he reached her, her cries had stopped. All he
found was an already liquefying skeleton. When the

sheriff arrived, there was nothing left.

Law enforcement, of course, assumed that there was

a madman on the loose. It looked almost certain
that
the person or persons involved were connected to
the sick bastard that had abducted and mutilated
Korena Brooks almost four years before. They had
no other clues, only the samples of the mysterious
fluid.
There had been no footprints around any of the
remains, save those of the victims, and not even
one
tire track. There was nothing to indicate how the
killer
or killers arrived at or left the scene. It was as

though each one of the deceased had simply
appeared out of nowhere at that point in time and
began to emulsify.

End Part 1 of 4

From: <dev1025@uswest.net>

Korena, Korena
Part 2 of 4

Disclaimers, summary, etc. in part one

*****************

"I think tonight would be a good night for
stargazing," Mulder smiled, looking up from the
reports.

Korena shook her head. " I think tomorrow would be

better."

"Your theory?" Mulder grinned.

"Theory?" Scully asked, brow raised.

Mulder met Korena's eye and the girl nodded.
Motioning the agents to follow she rolled over to
her desk and began typing to bring up what looked
to be a large chart, with several rows of figures
and what appeared to be points of navigation.

"Korena's got it all figured out," the agent
began in explanation.

"Mulder, it's still only theoretical. It worked
that last time. It takes more than once for a
theorem
to be proven. Don't patronize me or her," the
young woman complained, searching for the part of
the file she needed.

Dana gave a half-hearted attempt to hide her
smile, meeting her partner's eye.

"Okay, based on the time lapse between each
victim, and the sightings I've been tracking, I'd
say their sweep will start tomorrow at dusk,
coming
from the east by the river."

"Do they always start at a certain point?" Mulder
asked, bending to study the screen.

Korena's smile was sheepish, "I haven't figured
out the exact point of origin, having three
recorded victims is what got me this far. If I
were to just go by the sighting of the lights, my
figures would be even less precise. I don't know
why so many this year. I've kept records at the
other hot spots, where I think the ship goes when
it's not here and so far there has been nothing
mentioned about any 'victims.' In those places
it's all disappearances and alien abduction
speculations. The only proof we have is how the
abductees have been returned."

The conversation was interrupted by Elizabeth's
presence. The elderly woman announced lunch was
nearly ready and suggested that her houseguests
might use the time before the meal to settle into
their respective bedrooms.

After unpacking, Scully wandered from her small,
neat room near the bathroom out to the screened
back porch, Mulder's' assigned sleeping quarters.
The metal-thatched windows on three sides afforded

the room a nice, cool breeze. While offering less
privacy than her quarters, Scully secretly wished
she'd drawn his room. It offered a pleasant view
of a sprawling back yard that tapered off to the
tangled brush of the dense forest. The airy open
design made it the coolest spot in the house.

She found Mulder reclining in a rough-hewn
wooden rocking chair, padded by a colorful
homespun patchwork quilt. The setting was
Americana personified.

"Get you a pair of overalls and a baseball cap and

you'd fit right in, Mulder," she quipped, settling

down on a hanging bench swing.

The man hiked a long leg up on the window sill,
tipping the chair even further back. "Think I
should try some of this Red Man?" He indicated
the small can sitting beside his seat.

Scully's face screwed up in disgust. "Stick to the

seeds, G-man," she advised.

Mulder chuckled, indicating a brass spittoon
sitting by the door. "I'll just sit out here
tonight
and practice my aim."

Her laugh bubbled up, floating on the breeze,
"Think you could hit it?'

Mulder sat up straight, rising to the challenge,
"I KNOW I can," he began, reaching into his pocket

for his ever present supply of ammunition. This
demonstration of his prowess was halted by
Kristy's call, "Come and get it, dinner's ready."

***************

The agents soon discovered their presence was not
welcome or wanted. It is typical of small towns
that word travels fast and Korena's steadfast
resolve that she had been abducted by aliens did
not sit well with the local law enforcement. They
were searching for a killer, not little green men.

And now the crazy little loon had the FBI on her
side, wasting the taxpayers time and money.
Scully was surprised by the utter stonewalling
they received when they visited the Newton County
Sheriff's Department. Apparently, the Brooks
family had made some enemies with the sheriff.

"Well, that accomplished a lot," she spat bitterly

as they strolled out of the air-conditioned
building into the thick, humid heat. By silent
agreement Mulder took the wheel. She was just too
frustrated
to drive at that moment.

"Korena warned me what the weather was going to be

like in dealing with the locals. We got a feud
brewing. Korena's daddy had a lot to say when her
case went unsolved. Almost lost the sheriff his
election. Sides were chosen. To the sheriff, we're
the big guns and we got called out by the enemy.
Sad thing is, if this really was what they think
it is, a investigation for a serial killer, they'd
be doing themselves more harm than good with the
attitude they're copping."

Mulder pulled out onto the steaming black top
while Scully sat musing his comments in silence.
"Mulder," she began, finally wanting to break the
ice on what had been troubling her since their
arrival. " You know I've read the files on all the

new cases. And I've gone over what you've given me

on Korena. Could this possibly be what that
jackass and everybody else thinks it is? I mean I
know it's horrible to believe, especially for a
14-year-old girl, but couldn't what happened
to Korena be the act of some madman? Man's
inhumanity to man is well-documented. We've seen
what a twisted mind can do. Shouldn't we at least
be considering this fact?"

Mulder smile was painful. "Scully, not everything
is in the file I gave you. I've been writing to
Korena for three years now and some of what she's
told me is personal. I believe her. Her story's
never changed, not one detail. Even as young as
she was when it happened, she told her story and
you know the truth doesn't change."

"But..."

He didn't let her finish and his face was a hard
mask of steely intensity. "I asked myself all the
questions before I told Korena I'd come. That's
three and a half years between murders. Serial
killers
normally don't take a sabbatical from their
favorite pastime, at least not one as long as
that. Then I reasoned, well, he could have moved,
been doing his dirty deeds somewhere else. Nothing

showed up, so maybe he was in jail. Or maybe
something had put his mind at ease. He just didn't

need to kill during that time. Not likely, but
possible. It could happen, a serial killer being
happy without killing.

"Then I considered the facts of the case. The
unexplained substance that is "chemical
composition unknown," stuff that dissolves
human bones down to Jell-O. I thought, well
maybe it's some classified chemical weapon
from the military that a wacko got hold of. We
just might be seeing the fallout from some
cover-up. It's entirely believable that our
government wouldn't admit that something
this deadly fell into the wrong hands.

"The bottom line is, Scully, you always say that
we
should look for the simplest explanation. Korena's

version is the simplest."

"I'd hardly call alien abduction a "simple
explanation," Mulder," she stated sadly.

Mulder let out a harsh breath in exasperation,
"Scully, what she told me about what happened,
that very first time even... well, it couldn't
have
been a lie, or a delusion. It couldn't have just
sprung from the head of a teen-age country girl."

It was his partner's turn to interrupt," You're
not giving her enough credit. Korena shows
near genius capabilities in math. This is no
simple country girl. Mulder, I'm not saying
she's been deliberately misleading you or
that she's crazy. I'm saying you just might
have heard a tale of a child who suffered
through something that was more painful, more
horrifying, than anyone should ever have to go
through. Her story could be her subconscious way
of dealing with it all -- the fact that someone
could be so cruel as to deliberately burn someone
alive."

"So you don't believe her? You don't believe US?"

The agent gripped the steering wheel tightly.
Disappointment and hurt tinged his voice as he
said, "Why did you bother coming? Aren't you
tired of chasing down aliens?"

"Mulder," Scully softly replied, " Whoever did
this to her isn't a real human being -- I just
don't
think it's an alien."

The partners finished their drive in stony
silence.

***************

The cool, wet breeze rustled the pines, whispering

through the screened window to ruffle the agents'
hair. The anger at Scully had dissipated after
they'd spent the evening together, listening to
Korena tell her story. After hearing the young
woman speak, Mulder saw a certain amount of
change in the steadfast resolve of his partner's
doubts.

He and Scully had retired to his room, feeling the

lethargic aftereffects of Elizabeth's culinary
efforts. Two full plates of fried chicken, mashed
potatoes covered with cream gravy, fresh corn on
the cob, cornbread with real home-churned butter
did tend to make a person somewhat sleepy
afterwards. To make matters worse, he'd discovered

what okra was and had consumed three helpings
of the fried delicacy. He had topped everything
off with a massive bowl of homemade banana
pudding and felt lucky he had the energy to make
it to his rocking chair on the porch. Mulder
wondered, as he stretched to make more room in his

overstuffed gullet, if his life insurance coverage

would pay full benefits to his mom for on the job
death by gluttony.

Scully, while not overeating as much, did appear
uncomfortably full and the pair sat in silence,
letting their meal settle, enjoying the cool
breeze brought by an impending shower. The sound
of boards creaking beneath wheels announced
Korena's arrival.

"You two feel like a stuffed tick?" the young
woman queried with a smile.

"Does she cook like that every night? " Mulder
asked, shaking his head with misery.

"Naw, just for company," Korena admitted. There
was a moment's silence, then she spoke again,
directly to Scully. "Mulder tells me you don't
really believe in aliens."

Scully cut a heated glare in the direction of her
partner then, hopeful that the dim light would
cover her reddening cheeks, responded, "I just
have never seen proof."

Korena surprised the pair by giving a derisive
snort. The girl herself blushed at her own
reaction and leaned forward to catch Scully's
eye.

"I'm sorry. It's just that proof is what got me
into this. See, I grew up hearing about the
lights.
Everybody around here knows the yarns. You grow
up hearing them. Usually, they wind up being ghost

stories. They have this one about a girl whose
boyfriend raped and killed her. The light is
supposed to be her with a candle searching
for him to exact her revenge. I always wondered
where the ghost got this candle. See, that's how
my mind works.

"My momma used to tell me I argue just to hear
myself argue. That's why I was out there that
morning. I'd watched and listened all summer and
it seemed that the lights followed a pattern.  I
sat out in Uncle Joe's pasture all night. They
didn't come. I needed to sneak back home before
anyone knew I was gone. Just around daybreak, I
rolled up my sleeping bag and got on my bike to
get on home. That's when it happened. I felt a
tingle, then everything got dark.

When I opened my eyes, I was in a machine, a
big black machine. I was floating, in the middle
of this cylinder. Colored light passed over me
like something was scanning me. I figure that's
what it was, like an MRI or CAT scan. I never
saw any aliens.  This went on forever, the thing
moving up and down me. I couldn't move.  I
couldn't speak. It didn't hurt, but I was scared.
I was so scared."

She stopped to make sure Scully was paying
attention. She needn't have concerned herself.
She continued: "I'd seen the movies and the
TV shows. I used to love to watch them. I kept
waiting for the little gray men to come in and
start probing me. That never happened. Then
suddenly, I don't know how long it had been,
I felt like I was being swallowed by darkness
-- thick darkness. I could feel it. Next thing I
knew,  I was in the tank. I was floating in the
green liquid. I couldn't see anything. The stuff
was so thick. I was breathing it. It was all
around me.

"Then I felt air. The air was cool. I felt it
touching my skin. I could feel my body.
It had weight again. I knew I was still
covered with the green stuff, so I kept
my eyes closed. I started feeling my skin
burn. I screamed. It hurt. It hurt so much.
I ran, screaming and I tripped and fell into
the water. It was like I was on fire. I could
feel my skin burning, my muscles melting.
The water didn't help. It still hurt. I couldn't
get my face out of the water. I knew I was
going to drown. I didn't care. I just wanted
the pain to stop. It didn't. Not for a long,
long time."

Korena stopped at the end of her story, drained.

" I think I'll turn in now," she murmured softly
and without another word, wheeled away.

Mulder looked at his partner and saw she had tears

in her eyes.

"See why we're here?" he asked softly

Scully nodded.

End Part 2 of 4

Korena, Korena
Part 3 of 4
Disclaimer, summary, etc. in part 1

***************

Morning broke bright and muggy from the prior
evenings storm. The agents had slept late, their
hostess being too well mannered to awaken them.
The first chore, after grabbing some strong,
steaming, coffee, was to check out the riverfront
in order to decide on the best spot for their
evening
UFO watch. As the partners drove to the site, the
clouds began to form, promising yet another heavy
rain.

Scully angrily swatted at the gnats swarming
about her face. She glanced over to her partner,
standing in the distance, on the grassy bank,
silently perusing the muddy, slow moving river.
"Why don't they bother him?" she wondered, wiping
a sleeve across the wetness that plastered her
hair to her face. He didn't even look like he was
sweating. It wasn't fair. Physiologically, weren't

men supposed to sweat more?  Something was
wrong with this picture.

"What are you watching?" Scully asked, trudging
across the loamy soil. They were in the shade. It
was overcast. Why was it still so hot?

"Nothing I guess," he murmured, still staring
intently down the waterway. "There, Scully! Did
you see it?" He pointed up the bank, in the
distance, where the river made a wide bend.

She peered in the direction he indicated. All she
saw was dense, green foliage and the murky
tributary, twisting lazily downstream.

"Mulder, lets break for lunch. I don't even know
why we're here now."  She was talking to air. Her
partner had scrambled down the steep drop off and
was hurrying down a path beside the water.
"Mulder!" She yelled in exasperation. He stopped
suddenly, just short of the bend. Scully glanced
down at the steep slope and cursed, "Damn you
Mul..."

Dana Scully saw the light. It traveled across from

the other bank, where Mulder had been pointing.
The long, glowing pillar moved toward them,
rapidly picking up speed. She felt frozen to the
spot, watching the shining beacon, until she
realized it
moved to intercept her partner.

"Mulder" she screamed, finally able to move. She
scrambled down the bank, sliding on her backside
in the mud. "Mulder!!"

He never moved. Dana watched in horror as he was
enveloped by the light. In an instant, he was
gone.

***************

Long moments passed as Scully sat in the mud, too
stunned to do more than breathe. In, out, in, out.

She gasped, growing dizzy from her labored
breathing. Her mind couldn't grasp what had just
happened, right before her eyes, in broad
daylight. Her body finally reacted to the shock
and
she fell forward, catching herself with
wildly-trembling
hands. Scully raised her gaze once more to where
Mulder had stood, not five minutes before. He was
gone. She had seen him disappear, swallowed up by
a beam of light.

"Mulder," Scully whispered, struggling to make it
to her feet. The third try was successful and she
stumbled toward the spot where he had been
standing when he vanished. His footprints still
marked the place where he'd stood on the muddy
river bottom. She bent to touch them, trying to
confirm to herself the reality of the situation.
Glancing out over the water she saw no more signs
of the light. A quick look up showed her dark
swollen skies. Was he out there, somewhere high
above those charcoal colored clouds? Life had
taken on the surreal atmosphere of a dream.

She turned and climbed up the steep embankment.
The shock was finally fading, leaving behind a
worried confusion. What next? She kept moving,
hurrying to the car, not knowing the answer.

"Think, Dana, " she commanded herself, forgetting
where she'd put the keys. She began to laugh,
control slipping away, when she remembered that
Mulder had been driving. The keys were most likely

in his pocket. Sinking to the seat, resting her
head upon the wheel, she struggled to plan her
next move. Spotting her cell phone, she dialed
Elizabeth Brooks' number.

***************

IT'S THE LIGHT! NO, IT'S DARK. NO, NOT DARK...IT'S

NOTHING. I'M NOTHING, THAT'S WHAT IT IS. STAR
TREK. I'M BEING TRANSPORTED. LIKE ON STAR TREK.
MY GOD, MY GOD, THIS IS HAPPENING. THIS IS REAL.
WHAT'S NEXT? WHAT DID SHE SAY IS NEXT? MY GOD,
I'M BEING ABDUCTED!

NOT THIS. THIS ISN'T REAL. OH GOD, I KNOW WHAT
THEY DO! I'M GONNA DIE! NO, PLEASE DON'T DO THIS!
HELP ME! THEY'RE GOING TO MELT ME! I'M GONNA
DIE! SCULLY?

***************

Korena watched Special Agent Dana Scully as she
walked up the cracked side walk to the front
porch.  Never had she seen shock better defined
than the expression she saw on the woman's face
as she neared.

"She looks broken," Korena thought to herself.
It was frightening to see the change in the
agent's demeanor. Scully looked shaken to her
very soul. The morning's events had taken her
entire system of beliefs and turned them upside
down, disrupting her orderly life clear to its
very foundation.

"He's gone," Scully announced to everyone as she
opened the screen door. Her voice was soft, the
tone flat. Her eyes were glazed, lost and fearful.

"I don't know what to do." Her admission brought
the tears, and wrapping her arms about herself,
she began to softly sob. Mulder was gone. She
was alone and terrified of what she had seen.
HE was not there to comfort her.

"We have to be ready for when they bring him
back," Korena said firmly, trying to break through

the agent's daze.

The young woman had tossed her a lifeline and
Scully grabbed at it with both hands, "Can you
figure out when they'll return him?"

"Yeah," Korena spoke with a forced confidence.
"I can narrow the time down close enough. What
we're going to have to work on is location and
what to do for him when he appears. That'll be
your job, Scully."

Dana's tears subsided, and her eyes cleared, now
that there was a direction in which to go and a
job to do. "Can one of you boys run down to
Orange and pick me up another set of keys for
the rental?" she asked the brothers, her voice
becoming firmer with each passing second as her
resolve strengthened. " Who responds to medical
emergencies out here?  What town are they from?
Can you take me there before you leave?"

Korena smiled at the change in the agent.
Her idea to help her new friend get through this
had worked. Dana Scully was now on the case.

***************

THIS IS THE SHIP. I'M HERE ON AN ALIEN SHIP.
IT'S STARTED. THIS IS HAPPENING. I KNOW
WHAT'S GOING TO HAPPEN. WHERE'S THE
LIGHT? THE COLORED LIGHT THAT SCANS
ME. I CAN SEE. HOW CAN I SEE? THERE MUST
BE LIGHT COMING FROM SOMEWHERE.
WHERE IS THE LIGHT?

NO! I CAN'T MOVE. YOU KNEW THAT, MULDER.
KORENA TOLD YOU SHE COULDN'T MOVE WHEN
THIS HAPPENED TO HER. I  CAN'T TALK. I OPEN
MY MOUTH BUT NOTHING COMES OUT. THERE'S
OXYGEN HERE. WHY NOT? THEY'VE DONE THIS
FOR YEARS. THEY KNOW WHAT WE BREATHE.
WHAT DO THEY WANT TO KNOW ABOUT US?
WHY DO THEY STUDY US?

NOW, I SEE THEM. THE COLORED LIGHTS. SHE'S RIGHT.
THEY DON'T HURT. THIS IS JUST LIKE KORENA SAID.
IT'S HAPPENING JUST LIKE SHE SAID! THEY'RE GOING
TO
MELT ME! NO! OH, GOD! OH, GOD! HELP! STOP IT,
MULDER!
BUT I KNOW WHAT'S COMING. I KNOW HOW THIS ENDS.
I'M DEAD. THIS ENDS WITH ME DEAD. HOW MUCH LONGER?

I'M DEAD. OH, SCULLY. HELP ME, SCULLY!

***************

Scully decided no mention to anyone would be made
of Mulder
missing . Her chief reason was, of course, no one
would have
believed her story except the people who already
knew he was
gone and what good could the FBI, a sheriff's
department, for that
matter, any law enforcement agency do them?

Fortunately, the animosity she had encountered
with the sheriff in Deweyville did not extend to
the personnel of the Orange County Ambulance
Service.
The agent met with the director and informed him
that she and her partner were fast on the heels of
the
acid killer. She explained she was a doctor and
wished to borrow equipment that she might need
should they stumble upon a victim or she and her
partner be exposed to the fast acting chemical
during their manhunt.

The ambulance service had responded to the calls
that came in for the prior victims, so they knew
how important immediate medical attention would be

for anyone to survive an attack using the caustic
substance.

The medical technicians were as mystified as the
people at the laboratory that examined the green
compound. Scully did learn from the men that the
caustic properties appeared to have a half-life of

less than an hour. All of the personnel reported
that, with only one exception, no one had been
burned by touching the slime. The man who
had discovered Lisa had touched her and
received a nasty second degree burn on his hand.

They offered her another bit of interesting
information. The chemical seemed to burn the
victims two ways. It burned through the surface
tissues, but it also seeped into the underlying
nerves and muscles, and cooked the victim from
inside out. That is one reason why the bodies were

so totally and utterly destroyed. It was as though

the swelling tissues fed on the chemical and made
the process speed up.

Dana felt her heart beat faster and her stomach
burn with worry at hearing this news. Irrigation
alone would not stop the gel from doing it's
deadly work.

"Do you think ice would help retard the process?"
Scully asked hopefully. "Maybe immersion in ice
water at the scene?"

The men considered her idea and all agreed it
might, indeed, be a good plan of attack. The final

thing she needed was their assurance they could
have the flight for life, to the nearest burn
center, on call when they made their try at
capturing
the killer. The teams promised her they would do
all
they could to keep a helicopter on standby for
whatever time she told them. Scully hated lying to

them, but she knew the truth would not help her
mission.

It was dark by the time she headed back to the
Brook's house, her car full of what medical
equipment the helpful EMT's could spare. She
always carried a fairly well stocked pharmacopoeia

herself. With accident-prone Mulder as a partner
she'd learned not to leave home without it.

"Mulder," she whispered, tears stinging her eyes.
She angrily wiped at the wetness and fought for
control. "You don't have time for this, Dana," she

admonished herself.

Korena was at her desk, working away on her
computer. The young woman tendered a tired smile
at seeing Dana. "Maw-Maw saved you a plate. It's
in the kitchen on the stove."

Scully sighed, shaking her head ruefully, "Maybe
later. Things went pretty good for me. I got
everything I think we'll need. How are you
coming?"

"I have the time narrowed down to within an hour,
so I figured using that hour as a midline, we
should shoot for a 180 minute window, just to be
safe. Looks like the holding time for the victims
is right at 40 hours. Of course, that's not
precise because we don't have anything definite
for most of our abduction times." Korena
explained, pointing to the figures on the screen.

" So you think it'll be about 4 a.m., day after
tomorrow?"

Korena nodded. "Now as for location, the closest I

can come is a half-mile straight line. Lack of
exact time again. There's one constant that helps,

it was part of my theory I've been working on the
last couple of years. The sighting of the lights
seems to follow exactly the longitudinal meridian
93 degrees 30 minutes west. I've based my
work on that.  The aliens' sweep is confined to
North America, and it seems to work with all the
times I have."

Scully's eyes burned with excitement, " You're
kidding? That's great."

Korena pepped up a bit, too, and eagerly reported
her findings, "I believe the sweep they do here
lasts for -- here we go again, 40 solar days.
The lights travel north to south, then turns
around at the Gulf of Mexico and goes back north.
It looks like they should drop Mulder off in my
Uncle Joe's pasture. The midline is a quarter mile
so
I think we should set up in the middle and watch
both ways from that point.

"We're lucky he's going to be returned at this
part of their sweep, you know. It would have been
hell if it had been further south, along the river

or in the woods. There's no way we would have
been able to get to him in time."

"Let's hope we stay lucky," Scully murmured
softly.

***************

HOW LONG HAS IT BEEN? DID KORENA SAY SHE SLEPT? I
DON'T REMEMBER. I DON'T THINK I CAN SLEEP. IT'S
BEEN SO LONG. I CAN TELL THEY'RE HERE, NOW. IT'S
LIKE I CAN FEEL THEM WATCHING ME. MAYBE THEY CAN
FEEL ME.

I TRY TO COMMUNICATE, BUT I DON'T KNOW IF THEY
HEAR ME.

NO, THEY HEAR ME. I KNOW THEY HEAR ME. THEY JUST
DON'T CARE. I'M NOTHING TO THEM. THEY DON'T CARE.
I'M JUST SOMETHING THEY STUDY, AND WHEN THEY'RE
DONE, THEY'LL THROW ME AWAY. I'M DISPOSABLE. AFTER

THEY'RE DONE WITH ME, I'M GARBAGE TO THEM. THEY
DON'T CARE. OH, SHIT. I'M DEAD. SCULLY, PLEASE!
HELP ME. SCULLY, SCULLY.

***************

Kristy's boyfriend, Thumper Bowen, was leaving in
less than a week for college. The young man
planned to study engineering at Texas A & M in
College Station. He had worked all summer,
assisting his father who was an engineer. The
hands-on experience in the field proved to be
useful to the rescue plans. The boy helped
Scully establish the location of the all important

93.30 meridian. Once the position of the line was
drawn in her head, the agent chose the spot where
they would wait and watch for Mulder's return.

"We can put the trough right here," Dana
instructed Korena's brothers, indicating a spot
near the center of the field. She had already
enlisted all three boys to help the following
morning, and had also secured the use of their
four wheel drive trucks. "You're sure your Uncle
Joe doesn't mind us doing all this here?"

"No ma'am, he doesn't mind. He's the one that
found the puddle that was Old Oly. He said he
don't want this happenin' on his land no more."
Sonny answered.

Scully offered him a smile and shook her head at
how calmly these people handled the idea of aliens

in their midst. "Can we get the trough here by
tonight?"

"Yes ma'am," Red replied walking off a six foot
long rectangle in the muddy dirt. "We're set to
grab it this afternoon. This about where you want
it?"

The agent nodded and flipped through her spiral
bound checklist, going over everything yet another

time. She was nervous, terrified actually. There
were so many variables in what they planned to do,

each one waiting to foil the success of their
plans. And if they failed, they failed Mulder. He
would be dead, or left maimed and handicapped,
like Korena.

It chilled her, the heavy responsibility that
had fallen on her shoulders. Had Mulder felt like
this, when she was missing? Had he felt his
faith wavering? Had he doubted himself so much?
When she had been taken to the mother ship in
Antarctica, he had moved heaven and Earth to find
her and rescue her. Korena had almost pinpointed
every detail for her to rescue Mulder, Scully
still feared she couldn't manage the task.

Looking up at the high, cloud-streaked blue sky
she searched for the answers, willing him to send
her
the strength of his beliefs.

***************

OHMYGODOHMYGODOHMYGOD!!! HELP ME! HELP
ME. SCULLY! I'M HERE! HOW DID I GET HERE! THIS
IS IT. THIS IS THE TUBE. I'M IN THE TUBE, IT'S
ALMOST TIME IT'S ALMOST OVER! OH, GOD! THE
GREEN STUFF. I CAN'T SEE. CLOSE YOUR EYES,
MULDER. DON'T LET IT GET IN YOUR EYES. KORENA
SAID SHE KEPT HER EYES CLOSED. THAT'S HOW SHE
SAVED HER EYES. CLOSE MY EYES. I HAVE TO KEEP
THEM CLOSED. GOD, DON'T LET IT START BURNING
MY EYES. IT'S COMING. I KNOW IT'S COMING. GOD,
DON'T LET THIS HAPPEN TO ME. DON'T LET IT BURN
ME.

I KNOW WHAT'S COMING. HELP ME! PLEASE HELP ME!
DON'T DO THIS TO ME! LISTEN TO ME! OH GOD! HELP
ME, SCULLY. GOD PLEASE! I'M GOING TO DIE. IT'S
GOING TO BURN. HELP ME PLEASE. SCULLY!
***************

Korena sat in the cab of the truck watching the
preparations going on around her. They had arrived

at the site at midnight, a full three hours ahead
of the window. It was too early. Waiting was going

to be horrible, but she understood Scully's desire
to be
ready. The trough was placed here, at the midpoint

of the ship's sweep through the pasture. She knew
Dana planned to put the ice in the water that
filled the long metal tub around 3 a.m. If it
began to
melt, she had a dozen chests, filled with more to
replenish the supply.

The idea was to get Mulder to the trough as
quickly
as they could. They needed to shove him
in and let the clear water cleanse the green goo
from his skin. The ice was decided on after
talking to
the EMTs. Scully figured that the tissues'
swelling
from the substance seeping into the muscles could
be
slowed down by the cold. Hopefully, it would keep
it from burning him from inside out.

Korena touched the clear tubing that fed her
oxygen. Her lungs would never be the same. They
all said it was a miracle she'd survived what the
stuff had done to her lungs. Korena prayed
Scully's plan to irrigate his lungs worked. It was

horrifying to think what they were going to do to
Mulder, but it was the only way. There were no
portable irrigation devices.  When Mulder was
placed into the deep trough, the plan was to drown

him.

***************

SCULLY! WHAT'S HAPPENING! IT'S STARTING!
I FEEL IT! I'M WEIGHTLESS! OH GOD! MY BODY.

I FEEL MY BODY NOW. THE AIR. NO! DON'T OPEN
YOUR EYES! I FEEL THE AIR!

NO! THE AIR! I'M ON FIRE!!! IT BURNS! OH
MY GOD! IT'S BURNING ME! IT HURTS!
NO! DON'T TOUCH ME! IT BURNS! LET ME GO! IT HURTS!

NO! WATER? I'M IN WATER! GET IT OFF! WASH IT OFF!
OH GODOHGOD! I'M MELTING ! IT BURNS! NO, COLD!
IT'S TOO COLD! I BURN! IT HURTS! IT'S COLD! LET ME

GO! NO DON'T!

I CAN'T BREATHE! THE WATER! SIT UP! I CAN'T SIT
UP! LET ME UP! STOP! THERE'S SCULLY. SCULLY!
HELP ME! SCULLY, LET ME UP! I CAN'T BREATHE!
HELP ME GET IT OFF OF ME! SCULLY!! I CANT
BREATHE! HELP ME, PLEASE! SCULLY, HELP ME!

***************


The beam of light first flickered down into the
trees. It was swallowed up by the thick
undergrowth but the sight of the glow made
Dana Scully's heart begin to race. It was
showtime, D-Day, it was happening. Now! All the
plans, all the work was for this one upcoming
moment and everything that mattered to her would
be either destroyed or saved. Her breath caught in

her throat when finally the pillar of light came
into sight, cutting a swath through the clearing.

She watched it move ever closer. It the blink of
an eye, he appeared. Tall, lithely muscular,
completely nude -- he was silhouetted by the
spotlit glow. As it moved away, she saw him
standing rigidly straight in the moonlight. His
eyes were closed, his mouth open in a silent
scream, the greenish fluid oozing from the widely
agape orifice. He was covered with the toxic
substance. She and her crew sprang suddenly to
life, as if on cue. Korena's brothers reached him
first and wrapped the quilts about him, hefting
his struggling form between them as they raced
to the trough.

"Throw him in!!" Dana instructed, rushing to the
tub to meet them. She was amazed her voice sounded

so calm. She did not feel calm. The boys did as
she ordered. Mulder instantly reacted to the feel
of the ice water by trying to escape from the
frigid discomfort. She could tell by his
animal-like screams he was definitely not lucid.
Another medical worry -- he was probably heading
into shock. She had expected as much. "Get him
down in it! Quickly! Under the water! SIT ON HIM!"

Scully splashed the cleansing water over him,
trying to wash the thick goo from his wildly
thrashing form. She needed to get him to breathe
in the water, to irrigate his lungs, but he would
not
lie back docilely.

"Push his head under!" She screamed at the brother

-- Red, Sonny, she didn't know which one held his
shoulders. Mulder's eyes popped open with shock as

he was shoved backwards into the icy liquid. He
was struggling for air. His thrashing grew more
frantic. She knew what was happening. He was
drowning. His eyes were open now, she was amazed
to see he stared directly at her. Could he see
through the water that it was her? He must be able

to for his mouth worked to speak. He was silently
pleading to her that he couldn't breathe.

"It's okay, Mulder" she cried, shaken by his
mute entreaties for her help. His long, thin,
hands rose shakily upwards, grasping for purchase.

He was reaching for help. Instinct told him to sit

up, to find air. The boys held him under and she
watched his face until a last few bubbles escaped
from his nose and mouth.  His body went slack.

***************

Korena Brooks watched Scully and her brothers
struggle with her friend, trying to keep him in
the icy cold water. Tears streamed down her face
as she viewed the event. She whispered to herself
a silent cheer for Mulder to keep fighting. She
knew
that is what kept her alive. There was nothing for

her to do right now. Scully hadn't noticed, but
she had played her part in the drama the moment
the light had cut through to the pasture. She had
punched in the buttons that would signal the
agents' new found friends, the Orange County
EMTs. LifeFlight should be on its way.

Now, there was nothing for her to do but wait. She

couldn't find it in herself to pray. She'd found
that little ritual to be useless when this had
happened to her. She remembered, as she watched
Dana Scully work over the gray, limp form of a
very kind man, all the prayers she had offered
when she'd been on the ship. She played over
again in her mind how she had continued to
beseech a callous God during her long, painful
hospital stay. She recalled the last request she
had made to the uncaring entity, when her mother
lay dying of cancer. Her mother had been too
spent to fight the ravages of the disease. She had

been exhausted, worrying about the health of her
oldest daughter.

Korena smiled when she heard Mulder cough. Where
there was life there was hope. He was still alive.

Bright lights cut through the fog-shrouded dawn
and Korena realized the helicopter was here. She
spotted her baby brother running across the dewy
grass, wildly waving his arms, trying to get the
craft's attention. The medics followed him back to

where Mulder lay in the trough. Within minutes
they had
the agent strapped to a gurney and he was in the
air. Dana Scully had bullied her way on board.
Korena
had to smile, wondering how the little dynamo had
managed that feat.

Thumper was standing over her, asking her how she
felt. She waited to answer, thinking about the
truth. She was tired, weak -- it had been a long
night and her health was none too good. "Happy,"
she whispered, then requested the boys to take her

home. She needed to rest and wait by the phone for

news of her best friend.

END3/4


Korena, Korena
Part 4 of 4

*************

This wasn't how it was supposed to be. Somehow, if

and when he ever had a close encounter of the
third kind, Fox Mulder had pictured it as a
consciousness-raising experience. He'd heard the
horror stories. For better than a decade,
listening to alien abductees' recount their
memories, had been his life's work. Yet still, he
had thought, if it were to happen to him, it would

be an enlightening experience.

All he felt now was darkness, deep in his soul,
and pain. The pain was everywhere.

The doctors didn't know what to do for him, now.
When he'd first arrived, they'd known how to treat

him. They'd saved his life, completing the work
that Scully and Korena had begun. Mulder didn't
remember those first couple of days, when the
physicians at the University of Texas Medical
Branch in Galveston had first examined him, and
struggled long and hard to successfully keep
pneumonia and pulmonary edema at bay.  He was
still unconscious when they treated both the first

degree burns that covered him from head to toe and

the deep, second degree burns on both hands. He
was glad he'd missed all that.

 The torture that he had felt from the aftermath
of the alien, toxic substance, was enough that he
had seriously considered suicide. Of course there
was no chance that he could have actually done
away with himself. Not under the scrutinizing, 24
hour a day watch on an ICU patient. Now, however,
they had moved him to a room on the burn unit. He
was alone.

The doctors had said there was nothing they could
do for the agony that his damaged nerve endings
sent coursing through his body. Even the strongest

medication didn't scratch the surface of the pain.

It just made him sleepy and out of it, less able
to deal with the constant misery.

His dark thoughts were interrupted by a quick
knock at his door. It was Scully. She entered
carrying a large, hard bound book and moved to sit

in the chair beside his bed.

"Hey, you're looking better.  Has the medication
kicked in?" she asked, offering him an encouraging

smile.

Where had she been? He knew they must have just
dosed him with Demerol, his brain didn't seem to
want to function. Had she ever been to see him
since he'd been here? He didn't remember.

"What's wrong? Isn't it even taking the edge off?"

she questioned, rising to move to his side.

He could see in her eyes she wanted to touch him,
to comfort him. Apparently, she knew better. Maybe

she had been to see him.

" Have you been here?" he choked, then grimaced.
The agony he felt in his throat was worse than any

sore throat he'd ever had.

"Hey, don't talk. Remember?" She cautioned
patiently.

Scully had been through this before with him. He
sighed, tears filling his eyes.

*She must have been with me the whole time,* he
thought sadly, unable to stop his tears.

"It's okay, Mulder," his partner whispered in
comfort, her own eyes glistening, threatening to
spill over. "How 'bout I read to you some more?"

Mulder silently nodded.  He somehow knew the sound

of her voice would do more to ease his suffering
than any drug they gave him.

Scully smiled and moved her chair closer to his
side.

"Okay, let's see. Where was I? Ah, Fran and Harold

had just met up with Stu Redman. Okay."

He relaxed as she once again began to read.

**************

Dana Scully was dozing when the nurse came in to
check Mulder's vital signs.

"How come you're not sleeping?" the young RN
questioned, seeing that her patient was wide
awake.

Fox shrugged a shoulder in answer.

"You need something for the pain?" she asked,
feeling him tense as she checked his pulse.

He shook his head.

"Throat any better? Wanna try some juice again?"

Again her patient silently answered in the
negative.

"We need to get you taking more orally so you can
get rid of that tube."

Mulder considered her words then sighed, "Apple
juice."

His nurse smiled, "Okay, I'll go get it."

Scully stirred from her nap, " No, I'll grab some,

save you a few steps," the agent sleepily
murmured, stretching as she stood to work out the
kinks.

"No!" Mulder quickly complained.

Scully immediately sank back down into her seat by

his side. The nurse gave her a smile and a nod and

left to get her patient's drink.

"Your throat must be better if you can yell like
that," she murmured, forcing a grin.

Mulder looked away. He seemed to be embarrassed by

his outburst. Scully read his chagrin and
cautiously reached out to touch his cheek,
relieved when he didn't shy away from the physical

contact. He WAS getting better.

"Mulder, look at me," Scully insisted.

He complied with her request and met her eyes. She

was suprised how close to the surface his emotions

were. It showed how completely vulnerable his
experience had left him. Before, even ill, injured

or half dead, Mulder had always been in control of

his feelings. This time it was different.
Something
had torn away his protective walls. It frightened
Scully to see the naked fear in his eyes. It hurt
her to see such pain.

"Mulder, it's going to be okay. You're getting
better." Scully soothed, lightly smoothing his
hair away from his brow.

His mouth was still raw from the burns. The skin
had peeled and left the new flesh pink and tender,

yet still he worried his full bottom lip from
habit.

"Scully, I can't be alone," he choked, tears
threatening to spill from the corners of his eyes.

"Please."

"Mulder, I'm here."  She carefully slid the rail
down and moved her chair closer to the bed.

The sweet RN arrived with his juice, then quickly
left, not wanting to interrupt. Scully stood to
help him sip his drink. Even though he grimaced as
he
drank, he finished the small container in a matter

of minutes.

"More?" she asked.

Mulder shook his head and Dana settled back in her

chair.

"Are you ready to find out what happens to Fran
and Stu?" she asked picking up the book from the
bedside table.

"Larry saves the day, Vegas is destroyed and Fran
and Stu have their kid. It's a boy in the book."
Mulder gave her his first grin in longer than she
cared to remember.

"Oh, you've read it?" Scully laughed sheepishly,
"Why didn't you tell me?"

Mulder nodded, "Back in high school. I just like
hearing your voice, Scully."

Dana found herself blushing, "Well, do you want to

hear more?"

He shook his head, "Can you just talk to me? I
don't care what about. Pretend I'm Eddie Van
Blundht," he teased.

She cut him a cautionary glance but her smile
betrayed her, " I tell it better with a little
wine, but... It was my senior year in high
school."

******************

Dana Scully grabbed the plastic bag and placed it
on the bottom shelf of the mobile cart, mentally
marking where she'd put it. In the large white
sack were the medications she'd need to tend to
her partner's hands and what the doctor had
prescribed for his pain.

He was better, now, physically at least. His
damaged nerve endings were healing, slowly of
course, as nerves always do, but he was well
enough to get out of the hospital.

"Mulder, you ready to go?" Dana  called loudly, so

he could hear her through the closed bathroom
door.

"Scully, you mind opening the door" for me?" came
his muffled reply.

"Oh shit," she whispered, moving quickly to
release him from his temporary prison. She
breathed a sigh of relief when she say he was
smiling as he came out. It appeared that the
sheer joy of leaving the hospital was keeping
the depression that had been plaguing him at
bay.

"Now, can you do me one more favor," he asked, a
hint of his old sly grin playing at his mouth.

"I'm almost afraid to ask," Dana smiled playfully,

wanting to keep his high spirits intact. "What?"

"Can you zip my fly?"

The expression on his face was almost the old
Mulder, a teasing boyishness that she had sorely
missed. She complied with his request , surprised
that he had forced his tender skin into jeans.
They were baggy because of the weight he'd lost
during his confinement, but she knew they were
much harsher to his still irritated nerve endings
than
his sweat pants had been. She guessed he just
wanted to use the street pants as a badge of
recovery.

She guessed. "Guessed" was certainly a key word.
Scully sighed, she had no idea what was in his
head lately. Three and a half weeks in the
hospital, during which he had almost died and had
suffered more pain than any human being ever
deserved to experience and she had not been able
to draw anything more personal out of him than an
admission that he couldn't take being alone.

"Are we ready?" Mulder asked softly, interrupting
her thoughts.

Dana glanced up and realized he was impatiently
standing by the door.

'Mulder, let me go tell them we're ready. They're
not going to let you walk out you know?" she
warned, reminding him that a wheelchair ride was
going to be the only way hospital policy would
allow anyone to exit.

He made a disgusted face, but followed her out
into the hall as she found the head nurse to tell
her of their imminent departure. A teen-age
candy-striper was given the duty of driving
Mulder's two-wheeled chariot and Scully walked
beside the pair, pushing the cart that held the
personal odds and ends he had accumulated during
his long stay.

****************

Mulder stood by the railing, watching the murky
water  churn into foam as the ferry plowed through

Galveston Bay.

"Feel good to be outside?" Scully asked walking up

behind him.

He nodded, relishing the feel of the wind on his
face, the smell of the pungent salty air.

"That breeze isn't too much for your skin, is it?"

Scully worried, watching him carefully turn into
the cool spray.

"You got enough sunblock and lotion on my face
that if I fell in it'd cause a bigger oil spill
than the Valdez, Scully," he smiled. "It feels
great."

"Well you don't need a sunburn," she sniffed,
still concerned. "It's waterproof so I don't think

it'll wash off, but maybe we better go to the back

of the ferry so it doesn't get you wet."

"Oh, fuck it," he complained, his mood swinging
so quickly it sacred her. "Let's just go on back
to
the car."

Scully watched as he turned and strode away,
stunned by his sudden anger. He had been so
mercurial in the hospital, she hadn't know how to
deal with it. It had been her hope, that finally
getting out would calm his emotions. It didn't
look like that was how it was going to be.

****************

Korena Brooks was shocked to see how much weight
Mulder had lost, but other than being thinner and
having bandages on his hands there were no visible

aftereffects of his abduction -- at least no other

physical ones. No one had to tell Korena what kind

of damage had been done to him psychologically.
She knew all too well. Even after almost four
years, she still could not sleep unless Kristy was

in the room with her. The young woman chuckled to
herself, wondering what she was going to do if her

sister ever married Thumper.

Mulder had been in her home for two days now and
she'd not found a moment when she had been able to

speak privately to him. Korena was beginning to
wonder if this had been by his design. She found
her chance late evening of that second day, when
she spotted him sitting in his favorite chair on
the back porch.

"How ya feeling?" she questioned, maneuvering her
chair up beside him. He had been staring out at
the lush green expanse of backyard, hidden in
shadows from the full moon and apparently had not
heard her approach.

"Fine," he offered softly, a slight smile playing
across his lips. The agent looked at his gauze
wrapped hands as if to confirm this fact, then met

her eye. "Fine."

"It's good you're fine." Korena gave a tight
smile, "Not hurting any more?"

"Not really," Mulder murmured, turning back to
stare out the screened window.

"Good" she commented, her brow puckering in a
frown. There was a long moment's silence until
Korena finally broke the quite with a frustrated
sigh. "Mulder, are you going to wait to get home
before you tell me about what happened ?"

Fox looked down at his hands, "Korena, I don't
even want to think about what happened."

"But, that's all that you're gonna think about if
you don't talk to someone about it," Korena
replied adamantly. "Mulder, sometimes if you get
things out in the open, out in the light, they're
not so scary"

The agent cut her a sharp glance and the young
woman wondered if she'd overstepped her bounds.

"Korena, it wasn't how I thought it was going to
be," he confessed, his voice breaking with
sadness. "Somehow I pictured, if it ever happened
to me, if  I ever got abducted... I don't know, I
probably watched too much Steven Spielberg." His
laugh was bitter." I didn't handle it too well,
Korena."

"Why? Because you were scared? Mulder, it had to
have been worse for you, you knew what was coming.

You didn't know if we'd be able to help you. I
can't imagine knowing what was coming. Knowing
that when they released you were as good as dead.
Anyone would have been scared, Mulder."

He winced as the memories came flooding back --
feelings of helplessness, of anger.

"You know what was worst?" he asked, shaking his
head, tears springing to his eyes." I tried to
talk to them, but they didn't care. Korena, we
mean
nothing to them. We're garbage to them. And in the

end, there's nothing we can do to stop them."

Korena's eyes went wide at his words and she shook

her head vehemently," No, Mulder, don't you see?
That's not true anymore. They didn't win this
time. We beat them. You survived. Next time we'll
be ready. There're might be a way we can stop
them from taking us. But now we know how to save
the people they take. We even know where they'll
take them. We've learned the truth about them,
Mulder."

"I'm not sure if I want to know the truth anymore,

Korena. What's the truth gotten me?"

"It saved your ass Mulder. It's given me a reason
to go on. I've been talking to Maw-Maw since this
happened to you. See, Mulder, when they did this
to me, I thought I'd stopped having faith. I could

never understand how Maw-Maw could believe like
she does, you know, in God, and still believe in
me. But, I think she's got it figured out,
Mulder."

"Oh, your grandmother has the word from God on
alien abductions?" A bitter laugh escaped him, but

he stopped short at her glare.

"You'd shit if she did." Korena replied patiently,

"No, but she understands a lot more than you think

she does. She convinced me never to stop believing

in myself. I never lost faith. I never lost faith
in you,
 either. When this started happening again, who
did
I call?"

Mulder let the young woman's words sink in until
he was finally able to smile.

" I bet you still believe ET's out there," he
laughed,
motioning  to the starry night sky.

"Maybe," Korena grinned, " I want to believe,
Mulder."

****************

Alexandria, VA, two weeks later

Mulder smiled as he looked at his computer screen.

He had gone to the link Korena had sent him for
her web page.

"The truth is here on this website. They will
return -- the watch will start September 2002.
Anyone with news of the lights, all who live on
the 93rd parallel, please stay in contact. We want

to be ready when they come again!
Contact Korena Brooks at kbrooks@9330tofight.com"

The End

