From: capslock@ix.netcom.com (CapsLock)
Newsgroups: alt.tv.x-files.creative
Subject: NEW: LOW SPARK   1/1
Date: Wed, 13 Sep 95 23:57:22 GMT


LOW SPARK 
[a single-part vignette]
by Lori L. Bloomer (capslock@ix.netcom.com)

Characters from the X-FILES used without permission, to no profit or 
benefit. All original material herein copyright 1995 by Lori L. 
Bloomer. All rights reserved by the author. The author freely 
grants permission for this story to be reposted or archived at will, 
so long as the author's name is retained in connection with the work.

As you might have guessed from my other two stories, I have a bizarre 
fascination with the workings of Cancer Man's mind. This is a 
companion piece of sorts to SILENCE, EXILE AND CUNNING and TANGLED UP 
IN SCARLET. It came to me while I was at work today, so I wrote most 
of it on my lunch hour.

All my X-Files fanfic is available on my Web page, listed in the .sig 
at the end of the message, as well as in the XF creative archive. The 
song quote is from Traffic's "Low Spark of High-Heeled Boys." 


             ***************************
 
           "If you had just a minute to breathe
            And they granted you one final wish
            Would you ask for something 
            Like another chance...?"
	              -Traffic

               ***************************

FALL, 1995
ARLINGTON, VA

He had come to the cemetery empty-handed. He was not the maudlin or 
sentimental sort, and flowers on graves struck him as an exercise in 
futility on the part of the successful living to remember the failed 
dead, and he preferred to remember the dead by not repeating their 
mistakes.

When his time came to die, he told himself, it would not be at the 
hands of another. He would not relinquish his fate to another. 

He knew about the names he was called. The names no longer hurt him. 
Insults no longer affected him. He stood proof against the things that 
would pain most, hardened and shielded by his power.

The wind curled a tendril of smoke around the man, the haze a grey 
cloak about his face, concealing emotions that never showed. The deep 
grey topcoat covered a similar suit, a neat, nondescript garment. 
Nobody would ever pick him out of a crowd. He was unremarkable, to 
look at him.

The man stood still and silent, his eyes fixed on the tombstone. 
Another man who had died at the hands of the operatives of the "star 
chamber" behind the American government. Another man who'd given up 
his life in the name of principle. Far easier to take a coward's 
death, take a ridiculous chance and fail spectacularly than to make an 
effort to work from the inside out.

He shook his head. Another damned waste. The man had tossed his life 
away for Fox Mulder, and the ungrateful bastard didn't even have the 
courtesy to respect that sacrifice. No, of course not. Mulder was a 
brilliant, spoiled child. 

He liked that about Mulder--the younger Mulder, that was. The elder 
Mulder was dead now, he reminded himself, and only one of any 
consequence remained... well, only one on *this* world, at any rate.

Mulder had done this. He might as well have pulled the trigger. He and 
his Senator ally had somehow led astray a good link in the chain of 
command. The one called Deep Throat was dead now, and the man watched 
the grave with cold, dead eyes. 

A failure, he told himself. An underestimation of just what he was 
dealing with. That underestimation led Mulder to believe those same 
things. Mulder thinks he can win against us. 

The man shook his head again, sadly, crushing the cigarette under a 
wing-tip. Kill him now, he'd told Krycek, and you turn one man's 
belief into a crusade. Kill him and he becomes a martyr. Kill him, and 
Mulder wins.

He knew those words to be true, and yet, some part of him almost 
regretted them. Watching Mulder die... ah, but then, who would he have 
left to dance the dance, who would remain to oppose him? Who would 
enter the chess game?

The spatulate fingers capture the cigarette pack in his pocket. He 
opens it, retrieves another, and touched the lighter's flame to its 
end. He enjoys watching the smoke curl, the flame touching the tip of 
the cylinder, burning it.

He smoked cigarettes, knowing full well what sorts of chemicals and 
additives were used on the American tobacco crops. He didn't care. 
That was the part that Mulder had yet to fathom... why the one he 
called Cancer Man didn't care if he lived or died.

He mused to himself, the boy knows so little of who and what I am. He 
knows so damned little of the things he fights.

He didn't smile. Despite the image he'd taken pains to manufacture, he 
did not enjoy watching others suffer. He did not revel in the misery 
of humanity. Far from it. He had, in some ways, given over his whole 
being to the greater good. The things he did, he told himself, were 
necessary things. If the truth were known, the world would fall into a 
panic. The years of hard work required to bring the better part of the 
world's nations into the Digital Age would be lost. 

Still, at times, he questioned himself. At moments like this one, when 
he knew his duty but took no pleasure in its execution, he questioned 
his sanity and his beliefs. 

At times, Fox Mulder even made his adversary's belief waver, and that 
was the terrifying part of the young agent's power--he had the power 
to make others believe. The more time passed, the more convinced the 
man became that Mulder would either gain great power or die in infamy 
as a crackpot... but whether spectacular success or spectacular 
failure was the end result, Special Agent Fox Mulder would never live 
a normal life with normal goals and achievements. No... he was a rare 
sort that led the minds and hearts of thousands, the sort that 
proclaimed truth and dared others to follow in his wake.

Left to his self-appointed crusade, Fox Mulder would save the world, 
or damn it... and neither could be allowed. A status quo needed to be 
maintained. The truth would free no one, and would harm the careful 
veneer of silence that had been woven around the conspiracy of lies by 
men like this one for hundreds of years.

His hand moved, raising the cigarette to his mouth. 

Mulder, he mused with great fascination, a worthy adversary for a man 
who hadn't expected to face another capable opponent before his death. 
Most men were sheep, beneath all their posturings, once challenged. 
Mulder was not. 

He exhaled a long plume of smoke and watched it dissipate in the 
evening air, reflecting on his enemy, one of the few men he might 
someday consider an equal... if either of them survived so long. 

There is a Quixotic quality to Mulder, he observed. He'll tilt at the 
unlikeliest of windmills until the day when he happens to actually 
topple one... and he's come close, so close. Even he does not know his 
own strength.

And then, he added to himself, eyes still studying to tombstone, there 
is Dana Scully. She might have wound up buried in this very cemetery, 
had he not decided to spare her. She'd fought so hard not to get 
caught up in Mulder's spellbinding belief, and yet, she found herself 
wanting to believe right alongside her partner. 

None had suspected she might be so open to suggestion when she was 
assigned to the X-Files--quite the opposite. But now... now she was 
proving herself a formidable woman... she'd even garnered enough 
respect that he now took her far more seriously than before. 

She was a strong woman, a brilliant woman. A doctor who'd garnered 
respect in an organization where the power was mostly held by white 
males. She balanced Mulder, strangely, her skepticism and his belief 
fueling one another's fires. One would attempt to prove to prove the 
other wrong, and make discoveries.

There is strength in partnership... but there is weakness, too. For 
all of Mulder's insight, he could not see that Dana Scully was a 
liability in the long run. She was a handle. When Mulder needed to be 
pushed, anyone who could take Scully from him could push him. 

The man chuckles humorlessly and takes a final inhale from the 
cigarette, dropping it to the ground and grinding it out with his 
shoe. There is no amusement in his duty. There is no room for other 
hearts, other minds, in his own belief. 

For a moment, he wonders if he made the wrong choice, but he shakes 
the thought away, refusing to accept its potential validity. There was 
no room in his personal philosophy for doubt. There was no time for 
exploring other possibilities. Still, he wondered. At the end of it 
all, would he be nothing more than a drifting cloud of smoke, lost on 
the horizon...?

The wind ruffled his hair. He drew his topcoat around him and left the 
cemetery, silent and alone, as always. No wife, no family, no friends, 
no children. Some power...

Had he another chance, he knows with terrible certainty, he might have 
made another choice. 



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