From: Pen Name Charlotte <pennamecharlotte@yahoo.com>
Date: Mon, 10 Apr 2000 09:34:31 -0700 (PDT)
Subject: xfc: Missing Things, post All Things Challenge 
Source: xfc

Title: Missing Things

Author: Charlotte

Feedback: pennamecharlotte@yahoo.com

Category: MSR, V, Challenge/post "All Things"

Rating: PG

Spoilers: All Things

Archiving: OK, but PLEASE let me know first.

Disclaimer: Disclaimer: All rights to characters,
previous episodes, the X-files in general, etc., etc.
all belong to CC, GA, DD, Tenthirteen productions, and
Fox. No profit is made here.

Summary: This is a reflection vignette of Scully's
thoughts after the events in "All Things"

Author's Notes: I have never done a post-ep right
after the episode had aired, but I felt a need to in
this case, because I was confused by the events in
this episode, especially the first scene. This is my
take on how to make sense of what happened. I also saw
the challenge posted by Lorrie, and thought it would
be a good answer to her request. (This is totally
without beta except for spell check. It's just a short
thingy by me.)


*****

I watched the swirls of water and translucent paper
get sucked down into the porcelain bowl so much like
my life had felt before seeing Daniel again. The noise
of the flushing toilet would sooner wake the dead than
my sleeping partner in the next room. I hadn't
bothered to close the door while I made my quick pit
stop.

As I rinsed my hands and finished putting myself back
together, I finally felt the whirlwind subside. The
subtle breeze dragging through the last chapter of my
life had dwindled, and allowed the book to lay open,
undisturbed, ready for me to turn the next page when I
was ready.

A part of my life I had swept over and forgotten had
been neatly tucked between those pages, never to be
read again. I guess I had to revise the story before I
could venture onto the the next chapter of Dana
Katherine Scully. I didn't want to turn back. I had to
keep moving forward, for my sake, but also for his. Or
had I really been running for ten years?

"I don't know what I'd be missing," was what Mulder
said yesterday. I had ended it with Daniel because I
didn't want to know what I was missing. I didn't want
to be the happy housewife, or even the small-town
practitioner. I wanted the fast-paced world, passion
for my work. I wanted to go and do something that
would change the world, not tear apart the one Daniel
had built for his family and was willing to trash for
the love of a woman who didn't want him completely. I
didn't want him completely.

As I exited the bathroom and studied the long,
silvery, blue-lit form of my partner nestled in the
tangled sheets, I realized I didn't have him, nor did
I want him completely either. I had been told to slow
down. Mulder wasn't ready to do that, and I was not
going to repeat what Daniel had done to me.

I love Mulder, but I'm not going to hold him back, or
lust after him just because my biological clock is
ticking. He had been kind not to take advantage of me
in my vulnerable state. Perhaps I won't know him as
soon as I would like, in the way that I would like,
tangled in those sheets beside him. Not yet.

I pulled my jacket on in the pale slits of moonlight,
and carefully slipped each button into place one by
one. The two red dots on the alarm clock blinked in
rhythm with Mulder's breathing. On the end table
before the clock were Mulder's wallet, badge, and a
small pad he kept in his pocket to take notes on a
case.

I tiptoed over to the table, picked it up and began to
flip through the pages. Crop patterns, as I had
expected.

Before I reached the blank pages about halfway through
the book, I saw a familiar pattern: circular with a
large star in the center. The beat of my heart
quickened at the recognition of the marking, but I
contained my surprise with a couple of deep slow
breaths. Soon my pulse had returned to a steady pace,
along with the alarm clock dots, along with Mulder's
breathing, along with the dripping water from Mulder's
bathroom faucet.

I quietly, carefully, tore out the page with my
pattern, and gently placed the pad back onto the end
table. Inside my jacket pocket I had my own pad. I was
sure Mulder wouldn't miss one page from his messy
notepad. I was the organized one, after all. I took
out my book, and slipped the page in between the
leaflets.

As I walked toward the doorway to leave Mulder to his
happy slumber, I thought again about how I had lived
my life to lead up to this very moment. I stopped in
the doorway of the bedroom, staring in the direction
of his front door. Yes, that was the way out. I could
walk through that door and pick up exactly where I had
left off.

The bubbles of the fish tank blurped to the surface
irregularly in the hollow, empty living room. I looked
back into the dark quiet of Mulder's sanctuary and
heard the heavy restful rhythm of his breathing, still
perfectly in time with the seconds of the blinking
clock.

I opened my notepad. I unclipped the pen from the
cover. I wrote a two letter word on the back of the
page with the drawing of my crop pattern. I placed it
on the empty pillow next to Mulder's dream-filled
head.

I left.

I don't know if I missed anything in that chapter of
my life where everything was an adventure, everything
still had to be conquered, found out, achieved,
explored. But I was going to make sure that Mulder
knew exactly what he'd be missing if I let him keep on
running.

"me."




*****

Post note: I strongly believe that they did not end up
in bed together at the close of this episode, and I
hope that this fiction has explained that reasoning.
I'll expect disagreements. Feel free to disprove me. I
don't mind.

-Charlotte :-)

