From: dee ayy <dee_ayy@yahoo.com>
Date: Fri, 10 Dec 1999 23:22:22 -0800 (PST)
Subject: xfc: NEW: Maybe (Merry Christmas) by dee_ayy (1/1)
Source: xfc

From: dee ayy <dee_ayy@yahoo.com>

Maybe (Merry Christmas)

By dee_ayy

December 8, 1999

Disclaimer: Fox Belongs to Fox (and they certainly
don't deserve him, that's for darn sure!). Marie is
all mine, and I still like her. 

Category: V, A

IMPORTANT NOTE: This story is a follow up to something
I wrote over a year ago, a story about a hospice
worker sent to help the Scullys--and Mulder--cope with
Dana's cancer. It's called "I Know." Knowledge of that
story is absolutely essential. Seriously, folks, this
will make no sense whatsoever if you haven't read
that. It has been posted as a companion to this, or
you can get to it directly at
http://dee-ayy.freeservers.com/iknow.htm (And while
you're there, read the rest of my stories, why
dontcha?).

Archive: Absolutely. Especially anyone who archived "I
Know." I'd love you to put this with it. 

Feedback: Is better than any Christmas gift.
dee_ayy@yahoo.com

Thanks: Go out to Keryn, Vickie, Peggy G. and
Christine, who all convinced me to post this. And to
Mr. H, who seems to have been my muse. Flights of
angels, Frank. 

Summary: Follow up to "I Know." Two years later, a
chance encounter reopens old wounds, and maybe helps
them heal.
_________________________________________

Maybe (Merry Christmas)

By dee_ayy


"Marie? Is that you?" 

I'd seen him. Seen him a while ago actually. Saw him
wandering through the first floor of the department
store, almost aimless in his direction, casually
fingering scarves and jewelry and feminine leather
goods; unsure of what he was looking for, but in no
hurry. It was the behavior of a man who'd know what he
was looking for when he found it, and not a moment
before.  I'd seen him, and I'd been watching him,
unable to look away, fascinated by him--gripped by the
maelstrom of emotions his presence stirred up in me.
He looked exactly the same, though his hair was
shorter. But at the same time he looked completely
different. 

He looked happy. 
 
When his attention would shift from one item to
another, sometimes his gaze would fall perilously
close to mine, and I'd look down or away in haste. I
didn't want him to see me. I didn't want to be seen.
Not by him. 

"Marie?" 

I feel the panic of someone who has been caught
red-handed. Of course I know it's silly; he has no
idea I've been watching him for the better part of
twenty minutes. But I have been, and now he's seen me,
and I've been caught. 

I take a deep breath, surreptitiously wiping suddenly
sweaty palms on my coat, and turn to face him. I don't
smile, not yet. I'm not supposed to know who is
calling my name. 

"It is you. . . . Fox Mulder, remember? How are you?" 

Time to smile. "Of course I remember. How could I
forget? How's Dana?" How am I? He doesn't really want
to know. Best to not bother.

He grins. "She's fine. Great, actually. I want to say
she's cured, but she won't let me. Insists on using
the word 'remission.' Even still." 

I nod knowingly. "It's been. . . . how long has it
been?" It's been a little over two years. I don't need
to ask. 

"Two years," he answers. "How have you been? I've
often thought I should have. . . ." He lets his voice
trail off. It's an apology for not staying in touch, I
know. Little does he know he did me a favor, as did
Dana and her mom. 

"No, no, of course not, there was no need. My work was
done, so to speak." How have I been? I can't really
say. I try not to think about it. "Dana's back at
work?" 

He chuckles. "Oh yeah."

I smile for him. "I remember you talking about your
work. Goblins and monsters. Still chasing them?"

He nods. "You'd be surprised," he offers. 

"It must have been good to get your partner back." I
can only imagine. 

"If only for her uncanny knack for saving my ass." 

I arch an eyebrow, but he doesn't elaborate. We share
a moment of uncomfortable silence, neither of us sure
what to say next. Is there more to say, or has the
conversation run itself to its inevitable conclusion?
I'm not sure who fidgets first, him or me. But then
his expression brightens. He has thought of something
to say. 

"So you haven't answered my question." 

"Your question?" I know which question. 

"How are you? Are you still working for hospice?" He
says the word, a word he couldn't and wouldn't say two
years ago, with ease now. He says it like someone for
whom it is just an abstract concept.

I shake my head no. "I left not long after Dana went
into remission." 

He seems surprised to hear that. "Do you mind if I ask
why?" 

I shrug. Why is a question I have asked myself many
times. I try to rationalize it, try to come up with
lists of logical explanations. I had been good at it.
I'd helped people. I'd helped him. I left because of
him. "It got to be too ..." I pause, trying to decide on
the right word, and finally settle on "... hard." It's
not the best word, it doesn't even come close to
explaining. But it's the best I can do. 

He nods, and I can see the sympathy. I don't want his
sympathy. 

Or maybe I do. 

"Well, I think I told you that I didn't know how you
could do it. It's a shame, though. You helped a lot of
people, I'm sure." I take that for what it is--an
admission that I'd helped him and Dana. I know this;
he doesn't need to tell me. 

I shrug again. "Maybe." What the hell am I doing. I
don't want him to spell it out, yet that's what my
words seem to be fishing for. 

"No maybes," he says quietly. "You did." Thank you,
Fox, for not giving me what I seem to be craving but
certainly don't need. I don't want to be talking about
this, either. "So what are you doing now?" he asks,
mercifully changing the subject. I watch his
countenance brighten again as he does. He's closing
the book on that topic, and I am grateful. 

"This and that," I offer. "I didn't need to work, not
really. My husband left me some money. I'm doing
okay." I see the flash of horror run across his face.
He'd forgotten. He'd forgotten about Daniel. 

Of course he would. Why would he remember that. I need
to veer the conversation away, I can't leave him
responsible for the next words. 

"I write a little," I tell him. 

He's relieved, I can tell. "You do," he says with a
smile. "I remember you scribbling in those books. What
do you write?" 

"Umm, a couple of magazine articles, nothing much.
There's a novel in me somewhere, I think." 

"There's a novel in everyone somewhere, I think," he
says. "Kudos to anyone who can get it out of
themselves." 

"Well, I haven't succeeded yet." 

"Do you know what it's about yet?" He thinks he's
heading into safe territory. He should know better. 

"Life, death, love. The usual," I tell him. I keep my
tone light, and a smile I don't mean on my face. 

He nods, and smiles back at me. "You should call
Scully. She'd love to hear from you. Maggie, too." 

"No, I don't think so. Too painful, I think." I can't
believe I said that. I should have nodded and agreed
and went on my way, with the knowledge that it would
never happen. I should have lied. 

His face turns serious. "For them, or for you?" he
asks gently. So he does realize. He does know.

I pause for a moment, thinking. He probably thinks I
am deciding the answer. I know the answer; I'm
deciding how truthful to be. 

"Both," I finally decide on. I do not elaborate. 

"No, no, not for them. Definitely not for them. We all
understand and appreciate how much you did for us, you
know. They would love to hear from you." He'd said it.
Out loud. I'd managed to make him say it, and we're
back on that topic again. And I do know. I know how
much I'd helped them--but at an incredible personal
cost. 

Seeing them get lucky, get that second chance, had
nearly killed me. In the end, for them it had all been
just a bad dream. They woke up one morning and the sun
was shining, the monsters in the closet were gone, the
cancer was gone, and it had all been a bad dream. So
many people in their situation, myself included, had
fervently prayed that it was just a bad dream, that
they'd wake up and it would all be better. But
everyone else woke up and nothing had changed--the
only changes were for the worse. Dana and Fox were the
only ones who got their prayer answered. It can make
me angry and jealous and envious still. I couldn't
risk living through that again.

He's been patiently waiting out my reverie, but then
he speaks again. "But I think I understand," he says.
"I still don't know what I would have done. . . ."
Again his voice trails off, the thought finished but
unspoken. He doesn't know what he would have done if
he'd ended up like me, without the single most
important person in his life. 

I smile for him. It's a happy, encouraging smile, and
I think I mean it. "I know," I tell him. "You'd have
been all right. Eventually, you would have been all
right." 

He looks as though he doesn't quite believe me. "Are
you?" 

Am I? It's the big question. Am I? Sometimes. Usually.
Yeah, I think I am.

"Times like this," I motion toward the overabundance
of Christmas decorations all over the store, "can be
hard. But yeah, I am. Time heals." And it does. Even
the wounds you try hard to keep open. 

"All the more reason to call Scully," he says. I wish
he'd drop this.  

"Maybe," I allow. It's appropriately noncommittal.
Maybe it will appease him. "So how about you?" I ask.
"How have you been? You look well." 

"I am. I was ill for a bit this fall," 

"Oh?" I interject. I certainly didn't expect to hear
he'd been ill himself. 

"Yeah. Nothing serious. I'm 100% now, though." He
shifts uncomfortably as he speaks--he's lying, I can
tell. I could press, but I know he doesn't want me to.
It's just the small talk of old acquaintances who have
years to catch up on in a brief span of time. 

"Glad to hear it." And I am. I still feel the same
affinity for this man that I'd felt years ago. It has
only taken these few minutes for it to resurface. No,
not true. It resurfaced the minute I saw him. It had
been immediate. 

I had spent a great deal of time these past years
thinking about him, raging against his good fortune
because he got Dana back. Wishing I could be him.
Wishing I had his luck. Wishing all sorts of things I
would never admit to him. 

"So who are you shopping for?" I ask, but I already
know. 

"Guess," he says. "Every year we agree 'no presents.'
Every year both of us break the vow. It's tradition at
this point." He looks around the store, apparently
noticing the myriad of choices for the first time.
"Any ideas?" 

I couldn't have any idea. I don't know Dana Scully;
not the woman who lives today. I knew a different one,
one with different, simpler hopes and dreams and
expectations. I never knew the Dana Scully with her
whole life in front of her. 

"The only thing I'd feel confident speaking about is
her taste in nightclothes," I remind him. 

Did I do that to hurt him? Two years later and I still
seem intent on reminding him how lucky he is at every
opportunity. And it's something I am positive he's
keenly aware of. He doesn't need me to remind him. 

To his credit, he takes what I say with a smile.
"Well, you're about the same age as her. What would
you like? What would you like for Christmas?" 

I smile wistfully. It's the same smile I give anyone
who asks me this question. What I want I can never
have. Not ever. I want my husband back, and can't have
him. I want Daniel. 

If he realizes what I'd like to say, it doesn't show
on his face.

"Nothing much," I finally say. I look at my watch and
feign surprise at the time. "I have to get going. I'm
going to be late," I tell him. I'm not sure why I need
to cut this conversation off now, but I do. And the
need is urgent. 

He nods, and pulls out his wallet. I wonder what he's
doing, until he procures a business card. "Look," he
says. "That's my office number on there. I don't have
one of her cards, unfortunately, but Scully is always
hanging out in my office. Give her a call. I know
she'd love to hear from you." He stops for a moment,
pensively. "I think you should see her, Marie. See how
you helped her. See how she is, how it all turned
out." 

Maybe. Maybe he's right. Maybe seeing her would be
cathartic somehow. Maybe it would allow me to put
these feelings behind me. Maybe it would allow me to
return to the work I found so fulfilling and
worthwhile. Maybe. 

I take the card and grin slightly.  "We'll see," I
say. "It was great to see you," I tell him, and I mean
it. "Good luck with your shopping." 

He offers his hand, and I take it, and then, to my
great surprise, he pulls me into a hug. I think it
surprises even him. What starts as an impulsive,
awkward grasp quickly changes to a friendly embrace.
He'd never seemed like one to give in to his impulses.
I feel his breath over my ear. "Merry Christmas," he
whispers intimately before he lets me go. 

"Merry Christmas," I tell him before I turn to leave,
pocketing the card. 

I don't look back as I stride away, but I smile when I
hear him shout after me: "I want an autographed copy
of that novel!" 

Maybe. 

I'm going to be all right. 

<end>





=====
"Bear with us, 'cause we're old and stupid."  |
                                              |
                          --Fox Mulder        |
-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~|
I still have that web site! All the           |
Mulder-gets-sick fic you could ask for, at    |
http://dee-ayy.freeservers.com                |

