From: Windsinger@aol.com Date: 8 Dec 2002 19:46:41 -0800 Subject: xfc: NEW - My Travels w/ Charley 9 (06/11) by Windsinger Source: atxc MY TRAVELS WITH CHARLEY 09: Those Who Are About to Die (6 of 11) by Windsinger (Sue Esty) MULDER Ben saw it in my face even in the comparative dark of the tunnel under the power station. He reacted as if he were looking upon my death mask. I suspect he was. I refused to think that far in the future, however. Better to notice how surprisingly well Ben looked in the filthy but still colorful wraps the Family wore. Then I remembered that I had also dressed that way when I was recuperating on City. "How long do we have?" Ness asked. "Kathy says thirty-five minutes. At least that's when we must be on board. Billy's group is taking the ship even now. Kathy's group managed to lean on the horn as soon as they found out it was lifting today. That was ten minutes earlier than they usually get that kind of news and we'll need every minute." "Not much time to get into position," Ness frowned, "but also more time to get caught." "It's what we have. We'll need a miracle either way." We were half-running as we talked. Ness had not been boasting when she said that she knew the way. I was proud her, all the more for the guilt I felt at not giving her what she had been desperate for back on City. What a romantic adolescent she had been on City! I tried not to think of what the violent actions of the ship would do to her unborn child. Even at my best it would be bad, very bad. I could already hear the screaming of all those voices in my head. How could I dare to have any hope at all of holding it together? It was warmer in the tunnel then it had been outside. This wasn't surprising since the heat as well as the water and the atmosphere for the entire station was generated here. For the oddest instant it reminded me of the guestroom in our house on Martha's Vineyard. Set above the furnace room, it was always the warmest room in the house even with all the vents closed. On a chill and rainy Vineyard Sunday, it was always the best place to hide with a book. Why should that come to mind at now of all times? Probably because Ness's people never had had a room like that and the abductees never would again if I couldn't get these people away. Getting away also meant leaving no one behind to follow or even to report that the prisoners hadn't been incinerated along with all the little gray workers and the few elders that must be here to manage them. Even now they waited in their comfortable shelters for the Rock Four's artificial gravity to be shut off. If we were successful in our bomb laying, however, that gravity would never come back on. There wouldn't be a chunk of the asteroid left large enough to need it. I hadn't forgotten about those too sick or too weak to make the ship. Billy had warned me also that some dozens were imprisoned in labs scattered about the various camps. Even if they got the word they would be trapped. They would all die of explosion and fire if they weren't dead already from an atmosphere sucked into the vacuum of space. Stop it! I had never been a soldier. They are stronger than I would ever be. As this was spinning in my head, we were running ever downhill through tunnel after tunnel. Turn and turn and turn again and down a long slope. Finally, I could hear the deep Dolby drumming of engines, pumps and blowers. The reactors themselves wouldn't make any noise but the machinery to move the input and output around would be considerable. The reactors would, however, make a more than sufficient bomb. More than sufficient to tear Billy and Kathy's ship into a million pieces of slag if I couldn't get it far enough away in time. Finally the tunnel opened up into a huge cavern. The reactor room. It looked like the engine room of the Enterprise, Next Generation style, only about ten times as large and a whole lot gloomier. I was impressed -- also stunned. Now what to do? We hadn't met a gray-skinned soul. All alien life was snuggly hidden away in their shelters playing cards or having sex or whatever they did during these times. This was stupid and sloppy, like the lack of oversight of their slave labor force. They clearly had infinite confidence in the biological screen of their energy barrier. They also underestimated how tricky humans could be. Maybe if they attacked Earth straight on instead of spending all this effort trying to work with slimy groups like the Consortium and ol' Smoky, and developing ways of spreading Black Oil and breeding infected bees, they wouldn't be so hard to defeat. Just so there would be no surprises we left Ness to keep watch at the cavern entrance. I had Charley's plan in my mind of what we needed to do. Now to line up his schematics with what we had here. It didn't take much time. Charley can plan and my memory was as good as it had ever been. The components in our backpacks went together so simply that a child could have done it. In just a few minutes the deadly thing sat there looking like a dark pimple low and to the rear of one of the massive blue columns. Ben was surveying our handiwork as I fast-soldered the last circuit clip. "But will it do what he says?" he asked dubiously. "I'm not a mechanical engineer, but I've smelled enough plastic explosive to say 'yes' it will. Besides, it's too large to be a listening device and I doubt he'd want us to sneak in to improve their system performance." "The timer?" "Fifteen minutes more than it should take us to get back to the ship. Now came the glitch; there had to be one. When we turned around Ness was no longer crouched worriedly by the tunnel entrance. She was gone. Ben was through the door first. He must have heard the same voices I did -- real voices, not just those in our heads -- and headed towards a room near a branch of the corridor we had come down minutes before. What I heard, however, brought back many an old nightmare. "Woman, what are you doing here?" Ness's voice was timid, toneless, far from her normal voice. "I was sent to the lower levels. I was alone when the horns sounded." "These aren't the lower levels!" "I was on my way up to find a bunker." "Later. You have time. Help me with this human." Realization hit me like a blow in the chest. That was Charley's voice. and yet it wasn't. This was our bounty hunter, Scully. The one we both knew on Earth. How I knew instantly that they were not the same despite the identical sounds of their voices, I don't know. Must have been my spooky sense just as I have always known a lot of things long before Mindspeech. Some scuffling sounds came from the room where the two talked. "I can't," came Ness's unexpectedly dull and weary voice. "He's too heavy." "Useless creature! Take his feet then. I'll help." I risked a glance as Ben did. We both pulled back quickly. Ben looked stunned; something was very wrong. *No, * I told him mind to mind. It all suddenly made sense. In my room on Fred, when they thought me too ill or out of my mind to notice I had seen Charley morph into Jeremiah Smith before he 'laid hands' upon me. Certainly, Charley could shapeshift into anyone he wanted but why Jeremiah Smith? 'Smith' was the only shapeshifter to line up clearly on the human side and, therefore, certainly an enemy. But then why 'display' me on City in a way that would generate as much pity as scorn? Why put me down on Dale where he had expected me to heal and grow stronger? Why teach me to fly and give me a ship? For this job, he said. What was the real point of this job? There was far more going on here than the need to fulfill some mercenary's contact and now I finally knew what it was. The creature twenty feet from me, wrestling a limp human prisoner onto a table with Ness's reluctant help, did look like Charley, though he was wearing a kind of uniform the type of which I had never seen Charley wear. It was the voice that gave him away. A voice that sparked old, chilling memories the way, I realized, 'my' Charley's voice no longer did. I thought it was familiarity, but, no, this was Rodan, the original, the one who abducted and tortured children, the one Dan Rowe had known in his youth, but not, if I was right, the one who took Ben and Annicon and I from Dale. Ness had clearly known both in City but never knew there had been two. More than once, she mentioned that Rodan's mood was highly changeable -- from cold to nearly kind. This was clearly the crueler of the two. Yet he gave no sign that he had ever seen her before. Rodan was clearly too aloof and too busy to recognize, beneath the dirt, the human he had known within the Family's sterile circle. He was also the one who had collected the others and me from Oregon and tested our bodies nearly to death. Charley on the other hand was the one who had given Ness her heart's desire the same hour he took me from City. Rodan was the one who had decided not to kill me on the submarine but to leave me as good as dead. It was he who could have 'killed' me 'many times before.' But it must have been Charley, in Rodan's shape, who had healed my mother. (Oh, yes; I had pulled that out of Spender's mind before he cut into my brain.) Rodan, the bounty hunter, could not heal anything; the touch from this one could wither a dead branch. Unexpectedly the pieces to a puzzle I wasn't even aware I'd been given, had rearranged themselves revealing an entirely new picture. Now I knew why Jeremiah Smith-Charley wanted this place blown into the Horsehead nebula and beyond. It must have become too dangerous, the game he was playing, posing as the monster. It explained why Ben and Annicon seemed to know a different Charley than I did. They hadn't known Rodan; I had. Charley -- who had taken on Rodan's shape -- had to be particularly careful around me. He had tried to tell in that uncharacteristically chatty meeting how there were layers upon layers to this war. Clearly, he had intended for me to remove one of them. I was still crouched beside a doorway of inhuman size or shape and trying to decide what to do, when Ben made a small sound like strangled hiccup and rose from his hiding place. Without warning he just walked into the room with Ness and that devil. There he stood facing the shapeshifter and Ness who had her arms full of a comatose man. At first all I could think about was how I wished that I had my service weapon like in the far off good old days. Only later did I remember to open a crack in my mind to hear what in the world Ben was thinking. I nearly laughed. Ben wasn't thinking of anything. He had acted entirely on instinct and having nothing planned beforehand could not have been more perfect. He stood there with his empty hands and his mouth open and looked as dumbstruck as any newcomer on his planet. He also looked utterly harmless. Through his eyes I saw the familiar granite face turn towards him in cold fury. "What do you want?" he snarled. The snarl was accompanied by a few words in some other language, all of which had to be derogatory. Ben's mouth closed. Nervously, he wet his lips, and it opened again. "We're -- er -- wanted. She and I. Maintenance on shelter..." and he waved his hand vaguely in the direction we had been heading anyway. The shifter hissed what was clearly an oath in any language and gestured to the patient with which Ness was struggling. "Help her and then you both can go!" They began to struggle with the test subject, who was a big man and now a dead weight as well, to clamp him down on a bench. I could sense Benjamin's distress to be part of such a thing but he wisely followed Ness's lead. The man would die if all our plans came to fruition though there wasn't much that could be done to cure what had already been done to him. His body was cold and stiff from what I could feel through Ben's hands and his skin had a purplish hue and undulated with innumerable and lumps beneath the skin. I was thankful that my agriculturally inclined friend hurried in a correctly awkward way and didn't focus on the lumps. The last thing my stomach needed was for them was to move. While they worked I peered through the doorway with my own eyes and just inside noted a gleaming shelf of what could only be surgical instruments though of non-Human design. Stomach squirming, I flashed back on steel and sharp edges like these actually entering my own flesh early during my little side trip to hell. The scar on my chest that I seldom thought about ached. A whirling saw had cut there. My sinuses burned so suddenly that I thought I might explode with a betraying sneeze. And then without warning all the pictures of all the scars on all the abductees in my beloved files began to flicker before my eyes. Faster and faster they flashed, fuel for a rage to boil darker and darker. This creature had the lives of nine cats. What if he survived the explosion to stalk me and those I loved again? If Charley was willing to play his own dangerous game I could at least do this. We all had to be free from looking over our shoulders. Too many people, too many terrified children, had suffered too much. *Keep him busy, * I shot to Ben. Initially I registered consternation from that quarter, but within moments voices raised in the room. I heard scuffing sounds, and the shapeshifter snarled. Perfectly aware of the reckless act I was attempting and that failure would be catastrophic, I spun into the room on silent feet and closed my hand over the instrument that was most like an ice pick of the appropriate deadly length. Three running strides took me to where Ben had clumsily tripped and fallen against the shapeshifter who was now partially bent forward. Perfect. Before him was a sheet of polished metal on the side of a piece of equipment the size of a refrigerator. On that bright, imperfect surface I saw my own wolf-like reflection grow huge in the instant I closed. For the briefest second his eyes widened. Oh, he recognized me despite the funhouse image. It was the fact that I was here, when he hadn't seen me since 'Charley' had slipped me from his sadistic hands on City months before, that was the shock. I used that second to concentrate every ounce of strength in my body to thrust the blade home through muscles as thick and tough as a bull's and into the base of his skull. Until the last I expected him to whip around like something supernatural and take my throat in those massive hands. He did start to straighten, to turn, but he had those hands encumbered with the heavy man he had so recently mistreated, so that slight turning was all he managed before the massive form of bone and muscle toppled forward "Hide your eyes!" I shouted, "Get away! Now!" For even though I had turned away almost immediately, my eyes were already stinging from the fumes as the foaming green acid that was his blood beginning to burn acrid in the open air. We were all three out of the room in less than five seconds and running. "Ben, thank you," I wheezed once Rodan's toxic and very dead body, his unconscious test subject, and our bomb had been left a significant distance behind. "For what?" he puffed, as shaky as I, the folly of his rashly entering that horrible room to rescue Ness having taken its toll. "For reminding me of how I use to be." "A crazy fool?" "Damn right!" I cried. Literally cried. That was a surprise. Tears ran down my cheeks and snot dripped from my nose neither of which I had time to wipe away. Both, however, were better than breaking down into hysterical laughter. What tipped the balance and kept me staggering onward on wobbly legs was the thought of you, my dear Scully. How furious you would be at me for pulling such a fool stunt -- again. As I recall, however, the lecturing sometimes didn't begin until days after the event when you were sure that I was going to survive my latest escapade. In that respect I was in far better shape than usual. So far. Ben's voice came into my head. Easier to talk this way when scaling the steeply inclined path to the front door of the buried power station. * Mulder, I'm sorry. I wasn't thinking. I just needed to get Ness out of there. * I mentally shrugged. *Too often it just works out that way. * As we rounded a short turn, a harsh light appeared suddenly ahead of us. The tunnel entrance. The real race would begin once we were outside. * By the way, * I panted. * How were you so sure that wasn't Charley, our Charley? How did you suspect that there were two? * Ben refused to look me in the eye, which now that we were running side by side outside, he could. Noticing that Ness had fallen behind, he slowed imperceptibly for her and took her hand and then her arm to pull her along with him. *Ben...* * He didn't want you to know though I knew almost from the beginning. Annicon, too." That came as a shock. *How? * * Except when you were around, the Charley we knew spent too much time in other forms. Keeping his Rodan, or Dan Rowe, form didn't seem natural to him. So we asked. * As easy as that. Out of the mouths of babes... Having no fear, they simply asked. Somehow, Ness had been following what had largely been a silent conversation. "Two Rodans on City though not at the same time. This makes more sense than you may think. The impostor must have played the part before because Rodan has been hot and cold with the Family ever since I started taking notice of such things, which would have been when I was about -- twelve." She paused to catch her breath. The arm that was not clutching Ben's as they ran supported the small, muscular bulge of her waist. "If Charley took Mulder then it must have been he who gave me the baby. I thought that exceptionally gracious. Explains why he never sought me out here. What better test material?" Did it really matter? I didn't trust either of the shapeshifters not to perform slight of hand with my genes. "So why hasn't Rodan been scouring the universe for me?" "We asked Charley about that. His group doctored the records. As a result of your 'testimony', you were taken for study by one of the racial purity factions who refused to believe that humans could be genetically related to them in any way." "Dare I ask what supposedly happened to me there?" Even out of breath, Ben managed to a dour tone. "The subject does not usually survive vivisection." "Ouch." Made my guts twist, that thought did. And the timing of when Rodan became Charley, my real Charley, did make sense since it was only after I was taken aboard the Beast that I became, unwillingly, the demon's apprentice, and was forced to learn the gentle art of piloting these fifth dimensional ships. It's a dubious skill, you have to admit, considering what I now faced. *So if we're on the same side, why didn't he tell me? Why the pretense? * I didn't expect an answer. *To maintain the pretense in case you ran into any of Rodan's confederates. You are being watched, always. You must know that. They know your past relationship and could only expect you to loathe him. It had to appear that any obedience had been beaten into you. * He had done that well enough, at least in the beginning. So had dumping me on Dale with Ben actually been an act of desperation and not of punishment? A way of keeping me safe and out of the way while something worse hugged his trail? He may not have known what a desperate, sadistic bastard the Mayor of Dale had become. And Charley had definitely softened since that pickup. Was he embarrassed for what had happened to me there? Good. While we talked we worked our way at a slower pace through an ankle-twisting maze of rock. Now what passed for a plain on Rock Four was before us and time was passing more swiftly than our feet. Time to run again and run we did. I flashed on Aragorn, Legolas and Gimli tirelessly searching across the plains of Rohan, though this plain was black rather than green. Better than thinking about where we were headed. For that reason I shut Ben out, I shut them all out. Learning about Charley had been a shock but nothing like the aftershock of the beserker violence it had taken to kill Rodan. The bounty hunter dead. After all this time it seemed a dream. I needed some time, some quiet. Only there was this bomb ticking away that I had laid with my own hands. No time. Hard words stabbed into my mind. No, not mindspeech but memory. 'It's not all about you, Mulder.' You said that once, maybe more than once. You were so angry. Those were not good times. You were right then; you're right now. It's not about me, a solitary man or at least a kind of a man. It's about what needs to be done. 'Damn right!' your voice concurs with uncharacteristic vehemence. 'The creature was evil, Mulder. Don't you dare feel guilty about killing that!' You always were the predator, Scully. Usually I kill when I'm terrified, terrified for some future victim, or for you or for myself. I try not to kill in a rage because I have no judgement at times like that. I guess I made an exception in Rodan's case. But you, you always could kill cold. 'I do what I have to, I always have.' 'Including giving my ass a good tongue-lashing?' 'Including that. Not that I enjoyed it but sometimes I thought that I'd go crazy if I didn't. Damn it, Mulder, you didn't leave me any choice! What else could I do to keep you safe? Tie you down?' 'That would do for a start.' 'Mulder! Please don't. I'm tired. I'm so tired of these games. Haven't we gotten past that?' I knew the answer to that one all too well. 'Even in my imagination, I'm still afraid.' Her voice came soft into my mind like a cool breath across my brow. 'Not anymore, Mulder. There isn't time any more for that.' Then with sadness surpassing every sadness I've ever known the last whisper. 'I guess no time for anything anymore.' 'No, wait! Don't go! Damn it to hell, Scully, you know that I tried to come back. You know how hard. It's not fair, you know. After all I've been through, after all you must have suffered all these months, you would think that we'd be owed that much. But Fate doesn't keep score, does it? Just keep rolling the dice and somewhere between the rolls we have to make do the best we can. Well Fate was some high roller on our watch. Couldn't she have let it alone for a while, get a burger, take a leak. Shit, go to Hawaii. But, no. Just roll, roll, roll and with loaded dice yet!' 'Mulder... Mulder...' soothed the voice. 'We hardly ever said the words, we may not have done the 'dirty deed' more than twice, but I know, and you must know, that we loved. We loved more purely and fiercely than many an old married couple.' I wanted to laugh, suddenly, wildly, but I didn't have the breath. 'So where have you been?' I whispered. 'All these months and only a phrase now and then in my head and now this torrent.' 'Ah.' That Scully sound, that intake of breath. I can almost see the slow smile. 'Because you had hope before. On that kind of hope you knew that you would see me again. No doubts. But hope is all used up. You need me now to remind you that I've always been there, inside you. Never... ever... separated from you even here.' Reality came back into focus. Ugly gray-green sky and this plain of black gravel. Ben was running like a wounded deer beside me, staggering because his right side supported Ness who was gamely keeping up with his help. They were running for their lives and the child's, while I... 'You're right, Scully. They run for their lives while with every step I come closer to leaving mine behind me.' I see the lights of the shipyard over the false horizon now. They seem brighter even then before. Ironic; I guess you could say that I'm going into the light. At least I'm not being pushed into it; I'm going on my own. Scary though, not the light itself, but the getting to it. Hell lies between here and when I can finally rest. We top a rise and I can see the ship now. It grows closer and more incredibly huge with every footfall. From three, four directions, the last few figures are racing for it, humans in ragged clothes. By the ship a dark speck holds a light. A few more yards, I can make the figure out. It is Kathy, tall and strong and anxious, to show us the way in. Now Billy is beside her. He looks disheveled, clothes more torn than before, a little bloody about the mouth. I don't need to open that door in my mind to know that they and their groups now control the ship. My heart descends like two full fists of lead are lying in my stomach. It drops lower and lower as the distance closes. Four hundred yards, three hundred, two... If I could remember eating anything I'd be sick. There will be no moment for rest and reflection, Scully. I've had that. I can see the urgency in their eyes. Other doors along the sides of the ship are closing. There are no other figures outside except, I note, a pile of silent alien bodies, dumped to the side. Alien lives taken during the raid. So we are the last. The ship is ready to go except for two things: the gravity generator still functions and the ship needs its pilot. All at once fifty yards from where the two figures fidget and urge us on, I feel my feet leave the ground and don't want to return. It's an illusion but I feel like I'm falling 'up'. The leaden ball in my stomach turns to acid and threatens to rush back up my throat. My arms pinwheel, I must look ridiculous but its instinctive. I shoot a glance at Ben and Ness. They cling to each other like children, their eyes showing the same panic I feel as they struggle to stay upright. Yes, the gravity generators have shut down but at least there is still some gravity -- spin from the tumbling asteroid -- so it's all relative. We do find some purchase on the ground after a few terrifying microseconds. We land off balance and softly, like those old films of the astronauts on the moon. Disoriented, 'up' from 'down' is not so clear as it once was. Hands reach out for us and pull us forward. A dozen, ragged abductees spill from the ship, form a chain, and begin to tow us in. 'Don't touch me!' I want to scream, but I don't, at least not out loud and the door in my mind is firmly shut. Desperately, they tow to pull the three of us to that small black opening in the side of the ship. The metal railing is in my hand now, colder than my skin. The metal ramp rises up under my numb feet. The hands pulling on my arms are hard with desperation. They can't touch, however, the place where I hold safe a piece of your soul. One last embrace, my never love, my ever love, my constant star. It's the warmth of your brightness that I'll follow into the light. When your time comes, find me. I'll keep my own light on for you to bring you home. End of Chapter 6 MY TRAVELS WITH CHARLEY 09: Those Who Are About to Die (7 of 11) by Windsinger (Sue Esty) BENJAMIN Soon after we left the tunnels Mulder shut himself off from me. I assume that that meant from everyone. His face... I can't describe that kind of despair. The tendons in his neck looked stretched to breaking and not only from the effort of running though after being so recently ill he wasnt exactly in prime condition. There were tears flying off from his staring eyes though I don't think he actually saw anything as we ran. His attention was within. I didnt intrude; it was soon work enough keeping Ness on her feet and the both of us even with Mulder. She tried the best that she could, but her legs were shorter and for obvious reasons she had trouble catching her breath, so we didn't talk but we didn't need to. There was only one place to go; there was only one thing to do. Get to the ship! Lift off and away! Her body was warm beside mine and strong and she wasn't too proud to put her arm around my neck when she needed it. It was odd that feeling of strength and need and truth. Odd and wonderful at once. She was so small so deceptively fragile that my own body seemed to swell. I felt taller, stronger and my head swam as if I'd been drinking too much of Jezadiah's winter ale. There was no time to think about such things, however, just run and follow Mulder's figure whose stride was not so smooth either any more. He ran ragged as if he were running steeply downhill and would stop if he could. But there was no stopping this. The ship when it came into sight gleamed like a star, a thousand times brighter than the light of home during the blackest fall storm. But then we grew closer and it filled my entire vision and the immensity of it struck me as never before. I was finding breath to shout something to Mulder when all at once the world turned strange. My feet didn't want to touch the ground and Ness suddenly clung to me as if she were afraid of falling. The heavens rolled as much under my feet as over it. We floundered dizzy and disoriented for long seconds before hands grasped ours and we all staggered for the boarding ramp. The gravity generators had switched off as they were timed to do but that meant that we had to leave NOW and we weren't even inside the ship. No time to prepare, no time to say to say what? The hatch engine whined behind us and within seconds shut with a decisive Boom! I found myself and Ness alone in a gray metal tunnel stupidly clutching a safety rail as Kathy and Billy and two others hustled a gasping Mulder along at a run. And why shouldnt they? Who was I? Someone who should be there, answered an ache in my chest. "Hurry," I panted to Ness. "We have to follow them." She was bent over, struggling for breath, and holding her side and the slight swell of her abdomen at the same time. "You go... I'll follow." When I hesitated, she pushed me with surprisingly ferocity. "Be with him! Go on!" I did. I had to while they were still in sight. We wove through the ship. Although larger in every way, the interior reminded me enough of Fred, Charley's ship, that I wasn't completely overwhelmed. Somehow I sensed when we were nearing the command room. Dont ask me how, just a feeling, a slight change in the architecture of the serpentine corridors. There were no longer any travelers either, ragged men and women looking scared and hopeful at once, such as I had glimpsed from time to time nearer the entrance. Some had even given me directions. When I caught up with Mulder and his escort, they were standing before a set of wide double doors. Kathy was aggravated, demanding that Mulder go inside. Billy was quieter and more frightened but also insistent. "We have to go now!" But Mulder was waiting for something. I saw it in his dead white face as I skidded around the corner. He'd been waiting for me. "Now I'll go." As a group, we drew closer and the doors slid open to reveal a vast shadowy cavern without form or definition beyond. I shouldn't have been surprised; on Fred the Command Room had been like a cathedral. Despite his agitation, there was a definite pause before Mulder took his first step. We followed. "Only Ben," Mulder ordered in a voice so tight that it sounded like that of a stranger. "Get the others as ready as you can because when we go, there won't be any warning." He took a deep shuddering breath. "And it's going to be rough." Kathy looked angry and made no move to leave as if she wanted to make sure that this got done. There was more sympathy on Billy's face. He took her arm and was about to lead her away when Mulder stopped them. "Just remember," he said sternly, "that with luck you'll be picked up by Charley. I know that hell be watching for us, he inclined his head in my direction. It will be difficult considering his likeness to Rodan but you have to trust him. You have no choice. Just follow Ben's lead." Something dark stirred in the otherwise expressionless eyes. In any case, the devil is dead. I know he's dead. Ben can tell you, we killed him just a little while ago. That at least you can be certain of." There followed a curt nod of understanding from Billy but he didn't move away. He watched as Mulder faced the open doorway, took a deep breath, and then, biting down on his lower lip, moved into the room. For the first time something like sympathy touched Billy's face and even Kathy looked away. As ordered, I followed though I would have anyway. The current from the door as it slid closed moved the air on the back of my neck. The control room was a cave, a dim vastness, and at least half a dozen times the size of the one on Fred. And it had been waiting. As we approached, a light came up, a streak of startlingly white that gradually widened to illuminate one of the massive, altar-like command chairs. Mulder had gone ahead and was just standing beside that stone throne, staring at it. No, not just standing I could see as I came up beside him, but shaking, visibly shaking with the fingertips of one hand touching the cold stone. To keep himself from falling? Muscles in his face, on his jaw, twitched. "The flesh remembers," he snarled and as close as I was I got slammed by the power of the disgust he felt at the betrayal of his body. "What can I do?" He raised weary hazel eyes to mine and then, unexpected, raised his hand and laid it along the side of my face. It was chilled from the stone. Time stood still. "This is new," I said, surprised at the quaver in my voice. "Saw this in a movie once." "Mulder, this is absolutely not the time for jokes." "This is the best time," but there was no humor in the words that were raspy with tension. I felt him open to me or I should say he directed his mind into mine. It was like nothing before, like a beam of blazing sunshine. Even the tips of his fingers against my face were suddenly hot. His thoughts were still a blank to me, however. I'd not known him before to have such control. "So in the movie what was this for?" "The main character gave his soul into another man's keeping." The warmth was gone. A harbinger of winter blew across my heart. "I don't want your soul." "I'm not giving it to you; I wouldn't know how. Scully knows that I doubt that I even have one, at least not in the religious sense. I'm just giving you my journal, everything I've stored up about this trip. I want you to find her, she has a right to know." Instantly the chill became the full heart-stopping black cold of winter. "I won't be your errand b-boy!" I protested. "You tell her yourself!" "Ben." His voice came soft as the first snow. "You know that's not likely. And she has to be told. She has the right to more than silence. Not knowing, that's the cruelest thing." His hand came away and he seemed to stagger. I reached for him thinking he might fall, but he waved me off. "Let's get this over with." In a sudden fury he began to strip off his clothes. There was gooseflesh on that skin that fit so smoothly over his muscles. Time was moving again, moving far too quickly. With a leap as if given time to think about it he wouldn't have been able to do it, he was draped in the most uncomfortable position imaginable over the chair. Head back, wrists and legs dangling over the sharp edges, every muscle was as rigid as carved ice. There was no molding of this unforgiving throne around his body, just cold and heartless stone. "Lock me in! Now!" he ordered, and an image burst like a flame into mine of what control on the instrument bank on my right I had to push. But my gut and my head registered the terror that leaked around the closed windows of his mind of just what 'locking' him in meant. Obscene metal claws leaping out for the vulnerable face, three on each side, biting down hard and pulling. The metal spikes driving through scarred but healed skin into wrists and ankles. The blood spurting, running. Agony. "No!" I cried. "Ben, don't be a fool!" "I can't!" "Ben, we don't have time for this. Do you want everyone to die? It may be too late already." But I stood, my body frozen, paralyzed. I knew that it had to be done, but my body refused to do this terrible thing. An inarticulate shout exploded like a bomb in my head. As if all the shutters over all the windows and door in his mind were thrown back at once, the power like a gun under too much pressure burst out. Staggered by the spear thrust of pain I was unaware that, literally, the door had flown open and what seemed like a herd descended. He had called the four - Billy, Theresa, Kathy, and Gary. Behind the four followed the one he couldn't have called, Ness. Sweat-stained and pale; she was the only one to look in my direction. Distracted by her desperate eyes, I didn't see/hear clearly the exchange between the other four and Mulder. Billy was looking frantically around the huge space beyond the focus of Mulder and his chair. "You can't do this by yourself!" It was only then that I saw in the shadows what he had seen. Four more command chairs ringed around Mulder's central one. Kathy, Theresa and Gary were each already moving towards a chair shedding their rags, leaving one for Billy. "No! Mulder ordered to the three in fury when he saw their intent. Just lock me in and get out of here!" "We're not exactly giving you a choice," Kathy barked. "But Ive never worked as part of a group and none of you have done any of this." "You've never tried to move anything of this size on your own either, Billy argued in a softer voice as he reached for the control panel I had refused to touch. Even if all we can offer is moral support, we have to do something. There must be a reason for there to be five of these. No more talk, no more time!" With that Billy brought his hand down with a final, desperate stab. In response Mulder screamed, screamed with the most horrible scream I had ever heard. Billy had found the courage to do what I could not. Coward that I was, I refused to look in my friends direction even though the worst over. The strangling sounds from the tear-choked throat, however, those I did hear as Billy raced for Theresa's chair. Another scream pierced the air as the claws leaped out and the spikes drove through her frail skin and into bone. Gary's chair -- and another long scream. Kathy's chair -- and another, less loud. She was determined to be tough and had had more time to prepare. And then there were her scars. She may have known worse. Billy himself was naked now, leaping. I heard the slap of his unprotected skin against the cold stone. "Ness!" he called, the word barely recognizable what with the shaking of his voice. So he hadnt been unaffected by what he had done and what was going to happen to him. Ness left my side and ran forward. She had seen how the locking was done, but I found myself beating her there and stabbed at the control myself. A spray of blood caught me in the face. If Billy could do that to Mulder, I could do the same to him and Ness shouldn't have to. No one should have to induce such cruelty who was carrying life the way she was. Under my feet, in my bones, I felt huge engines begin to power up. "Out of here now!" came a strangled command, Im not sure from who. There was too much pain in that room. I glanced over at Mulder. There was blood streaming from the spikes in wrists and knees, blood on his strained face so it looked like he was weeping black rivers. Though he could only move his eyes, that horrible gaze was for us. Be good p-parents. He had to struggle to find breath, each one a heart-wrenching effort. "And promise... tell S-Scully l- loved her..." His mouth moved some more, tugging at the impossibly distorted face but I couldn't make out the words. Something about the rip tide of misery and hopelessness and terror in that room, Ness's hand gripping mine, and the crashing like an ocean in my ears, made it impossible to hear more. Were those the engines? Their whine had risen and deepened so that they sounded like wild beasts, newly awakened and frantic to be free. Mulder's eyes were closed in strain, as the bloody eyes of the others were closed. They were far, far away from us now, locked together in their common, impossible purpose. Ness was dragging on my arm. "He said 'get out'!" she shouted as close to my ear as she could manage. Had he? We turned and ran, or tried to. The floor bucked under our feet just as we reached the door so that we barely made it through before the panel slammed shut behind us with a 'BOOM'! The floor was not rising now; it was more like an earthquake. Up, down, sideways. At least at times the ship was off the ground or was that only the artificial gravity flickering on and off. One second we floated clinging to walls, then we were crushed, pushed flat under a giant hand. On the floor beneath the carvings on the dark walls of the corridor, Ness, crumpled in an awkward heap, was obviously crying but not enough to be heard above the roaring of the engines. With a terrible effort she reached for me. As quickly, the gravity disappeared altogether. My stomach lurched as we were thrown into the air. Then it returned, a hundred-fold, to slam us into the carvings and down. Ness screamed, not in fright this time, but in a sharp, terrible pain mixed with terror. Though our gyrating, booming world was doing its best to pull us apart, I groped for her. I don't know how I managed to reach her but I did, a weeping bundle squashed between wall and floor by invisible forces beyond her strength. I huddled around her, my breath in her hair, aware suddenly at how much time had past since we had set the charges in the power station. Too much time. No, not too much time; just enough, just barely. Though I didnt know it then, at that moment the charges under the power station went off beginning a chain reaction of mammoth, progressive explosions along the spine of what would be Rock Four for only a few moments longer. And the ship -- this limping, straining white mountain of a ship -- wasn't nearly far enough away. The Ship Sometime later Sounds, sounds echoed like those inside the kind of cave where water dripped into a shallow pond. In time they grew louder to boom along like the beat of a drum. It took time to realize that what I was hearing was footsteps, many scurrying ones and one set of slow deliberate ones. The inside of my aching head was the drum. From above, fingers pressed down seeking the pulse at my throat but stayed only long enough to test whether or not I lived. I did, but not happily. A series of words faded in and out above me but I couldn't make them out. Then a woman spoke and that sound was still unusual enough to cut through the fog. "...so much blood." Blood? My blood? I certainly hurt in enough places. But another woman was crying. I did my best to shake away the gray shapes before my eyes. Bodies filed past. Limping. Bruised. Two were bent over a figure on the floor beside me. Ness! I raised by head. Somehow I managed a sitting position but in doing so put my right hand down into a slippery pool of blood. The pool was dry around the edges so it had been there some time, maybe an hour. And the pool was cold, very cold, like the air. But not my blood. I pushed the legs aside that blocked my view. Ness on her side; she didn't have the strength to sit. She was crying over something in her hands, a thing the length of her palm covered in blood like that that seemed to be everywhere but especially between her thighs. She saw me staring at her and somehow found the strength to speak so I must have looked as stupidly dazed as I felt. "I-I lost the baby." Stupid! I should have guessed that immediately. Two forms in work gang rags stepped back my range of vision. Very efficiently but very gently, they placed her on a litter and began to carry her away. "Wait!" I was struggling, very ineffectively, to stand, my muscles as insubstantial as a chewed toro root, when other former prisoners helped me to her side. Her white face terrified me. On Dale this kind of trauma was a death sentence but, I reminded myself over and over, this wasn't Dale. Supposedly others could help her, just not me. Suddenly a cold hand latched onto mine. "I'll hold. Go to him!" she urged me in a ghost of her former voice and I was left standing stupidly as the litter moved on. Him? When I first woke I had been aware only of Ness because she was all I could see, but now my vision had cleared. Indistinct forms became more former prisoners. Pairs of them managed litters and each bore an absolutely silent figure. Two were ahead of me down the corridor, one was beside me and a fourth was just exiting -- -- the command room! It had taken this long for the where and why to come back. There had been five in that room on those beds of pain, and of the four I could see none of them was Mulder. But their skin! It was like singed paper, white and dry and flaking as if they were something old and dead that had been left out in a desert sun way too long. "Mulder..." I broke away from the two who has helped me and stumbled into the command room. There was this smell, or rather a host of smells. There was sweat and urine and worse but most of all was the stench of something sweet and oily and burned. My stomach threatened to crawl up my throat. Charley of all incomprehensible figures was standing before the central 'rock' gently extracting a limp arm from a spike. It didn't want to come; he had to tug with some effort. When it came away, the once bright spike was encrusted to the hilt with something dry and dark. Hollow-eyed workers were attempting to free the long, bare legs. At least they had released the skin of his face from the claws first. Still I wanted to throw up. The condition of the skin made him look long-past dead. It was that swollen and distorted; the wounds looked old and burnt. Oh, Mulder... Poor friend. Didn't make sense. A person would have to be dead days to look this bad. Certainly not that much time had passed. The last spike was finally withdrawn, the dried blood and torn tissue pulling roughly at the skin. I winced and doing caught a glimpse of movement. Eyes opened. Slowly, but they opened. Alive? No, not possible. But there they were. They didn't belong to any man I knew, however. The eyes of the man I knew were as often green as a forest with mischief as they were brown with serious contemplation. Nor did they pierce the heart with the fire of their anger. Theses were not so much eyes as dead coals burnt to cinder and dust. End of Chapter 7 MY TRAVELS WITH CHARLEY 09: Those Who Are About to Die (8 of 11) by Windsinger (Sue Esty) Ness stared upward, up and up. It was a small room but tall, the naked bodies stacked on shelves twenty high at least, two to a shelf. They looked like corpses but there was only the slightest scent of putrefaction. The sickening sweet scent would have been stronger if even one of this company had been truly dead. Noticing a shiver run through her slight frame, I put my arm around her. She pressed against me, her oat-colored hair drifting under my nose. In other times I would have felt a wave of giddy, adolescent hormones. Not now, certainly not in these terrible days. This was comfort, my desperate need as strong as hers. We left the dim 'morgue', as Theresa had called it in her last conscious moments, for the anteroom, a place vaguely circular, draped in shadows. Charley was frowning as he stood over Mulder's body, and 'body' was about all it was. He had not opened those dead eyes again, nor made any movement. The rare rise and fall of his chest was barely detectable. He wore no clothes but unlike the others was covered from the waist down with one of the hand-made woven cloths that only Ness and her family members had worn on Rock Four, as I had for a short time. Ness and I now wore ship-type jumpsuits that matched Charley's, a kind of camouflage to show that we were with him. The cloth that covered Mulder was striking because its colors weren't faded and encrusted with dirt and filth as the cloth worn by the imprisoned Family members had been. It was the color, mostly blues and rich browns, which was thing oddest thing of all in this colorless place of iron-gray walls and pale-white skin. It made me long for the plowed fields of Dale. "Where did that come from?" I asked to no one in particular when I first saw it, two days before. That had been on my first visit to Mulder and what was left of the other pilots in Fred's infirmary. The incongruous cloth had covered his nakedness then as now. It had seemed too heavy and rough-weaved a thing to touch the horribly bruised and battered flesh. "He wove that himself," came Ness's soft voice that day from where she was recovering her strength on her own pallet beyond where the critical 'Five' lay like corpses lying in state. "It was when we lived together on City. He took it when he left, they found it with the few things Charley had brought from the little ship that Mulder calls 'the beast'." "He told me some of City. I can't imagine it. Tell me more when you feel up to it." "You'll see it for yourself very soon," she promised me, the shadows in her eyes even darker than her bruised face. And I did, for that's where we were now. Charley, Ness, and I and those of the Five who still lived had shuttled unobtrusively to City, a magnificently overwhelming impossibility of a technological marvel turning slowly in space. Ness had lived her life there except for the few months on at the research station and her feeling about the place were as stormy as they were fond. As always, my eyes went to the narrow band around his wrist. It blinked with a blue light at every heartbeat. The light, which had been slowing over the last days, now blinked erratically, sometimes skipping, sometimes rushing. The light itself was so dim that if his arm were not in a particularly deep shadow it probably wouldn't have registered at all. "We're risking detection!" Charley grumbled for what must have been the sixth time that hour. "I know how much you risked to bring the four of them back here, but we need a little more time. We have to know if this is what he wants!" "This arrangement is his only chance, unless this kills him first." The shapeshifter held up the device that we knew contained the stimulant that might bring Mulder around for a few precious minutes. "We have to have him conscious to ask him," Ness whispered. Frown deepening to a scowl, Charley pressed the device against the blue-white neck. When he pulled it away, a strip of the dried skin flaked away. The skin of all of the remaining Four was doing that, drifting away at the slightest touch like chaff in the wind. Thinking about his skin kept me from thinking about his heart. We knew that it was swollen and was bleeding inside. Most of his other organs were not in any better shape. Even with the help of the others, if they had been of any help and not just a distraction, the stress of trying to lift the mammoth ship had been too much for this frail human body. He had nearly burst that heart, his gut, trying. But the effort had been enough, if barely. Of the two hundred forty-three humans who had made it aboard the ship, only twenty had died in addition to Ness's baby. As Mulder had predicted, the ride had been very rough, the explosion of the asteroid, far too close, but we had lived long enough to be picked up by Charley and his big cruiser, the one that Mulder in better times had named Fred. That seemed to have been in another life but had been in fact less than five days. Thankfully, Fred had been large enough to hold all of us. Odd that. It was as if Charley had had some premonition that our little act of terrorism would also turn out to be a rescue mission. In fact, Fred had been a comfortable size for us all with only a little room to spare. Since Charley had administered the stimulant, I had been intently staring for any sign. I feared there would be none, he was that burnt out. There really was a chance that under such stress his life force would, like a casual step on a dry branch, simply snap. The small blue light on the wristband, faltered. Beside me, I felt Ness hold her breath. Wait... wait.... Then the blinking began again, a little irregularly, but also a little faster and certainly with more strength. Ness breathed again and I felt the bands around my own heart loosen. As we watched, Mulder's chest moved as well, with effort, but still with the first real breath that we'd seen. I forced myself to touch his hand. More bits of hid dry skin floated away. The appendage was as heavy and cold as death. I held the hand anyway though it lay like a stone in mine. Ness was calling his name and touching his straw-dry hair. Another struggling breath and lips parted and eyelids fluttered. No, I thought, remembering the burned ciders I had seen, please not the eyes. My attention left the dead hand. The eyes opened haltingly and what I saw were as expressionless as flat, gray river stones that endless time had washed smooth. His mouth shaped words though he hadn't really breath to speak. "S-Scully...?" What else did I expect? When had she ever not been ever first in his thoughts? "Peace," Ness whispered. "You've been badly injured. It was the effort of raising the ship. You should never have tried, but you saved us all." His brow furrowed. "The ship on Rock Four, remember? The one you and the others were piloting." A deep line narrowed the eyes and he frowned. Charley was shaking his head. "The trauma. Of course, it affected the mind as well. This is useless." "He has to remember some of it. Do you remember being abducted?" I asked. "You were taken from earth. Lots of people were. Do you remember the space station? City? Ness? The planet Dale? The farm at sunrise? At sunset?" Do you remember me? Consternation showed on that corpse-pale face or as much as a man barely living can show. Charley came forward and placed a finger on the pink scar, straight and smooth down the length of Mulder's breastbone. "Do you remember the tests? Of being cut here? Of the chair?" A pause and then Mulder's head jerked. Then there were a series of small spasms. It was almost as if I could see the memories popping up erratic and terrifying. "Scully..." came out of that ruined mouth, cracked and dry like an old man's. A prayer, a petition, more wish than words. "She's not here," Ness apologized in her softest voice. "That's what this is about. You've been gone from her for a long time. She must be frantic wondering what happened to you. That's the point. Mulder, you're dying--" "Ness!" "Ben, he has to be told... Mulder, If you die out here, she'll never know." She gave that a moment to sink in, for him to feel the passage Death had already made across his ruined flesh. Nothing moved except the eyes and that mouth. I don't know if his body was capable of more, whether the nerves even worked, or if he just had lost the strength, or the will. A shadow of incredible sadness passed over his face. It's like that when there is no more time for dreams. "S-So?" finally came out with a rattling breath. Then came a few words I couldn't understand and then "...choice?" 'Do I have a choice?' he meant. I looked towards Charley to see if he wanted to do the telling. I found him changed. As often as I had seen it happen, it always surprised me. A much thinner man stood beside me, still tall, but slightly stooped of shoulder and with an older and lined fine. A peaceful, gentle face. I'd seen this form of Charley before. It was the one he had not wanted Mulder to see before. "Remember me?" he asked in a voice that matched that face. Mulder's eyes narrowed as if thinking was painful. "Smith." The lined face smiled. "Right. Jeremiah Smith, or one of them. We wear this form in remembrance of the human man who first convinced our faction of your 'Humanity'. You know that I mean you no harm. You know that I fight your enemies. What the woman says is true, you have been badly injured, so badly that I can do nothing. I wouldn't know where to start this time. Death is inevitable unless you can find some very special help. Our common enemy has developed a powerful treatment; it's carried by a virus. I can give it to you. In time it can reverse all your injuries, but it will go beyond that if not stopped. You will be transformed into something barely more human than they are." Mulder's weary but horrified gaze was fixed on the speaker's face. He heard; he very clearly understood. "You are only one of the many nearly dead here. After they are infected, they will be seeded on your planet. Some will truly die but most will transform unless -- " Mulder gaze was no longer weary. " -- unless one of my persuasion finds them. We have knowledge and experience. We know that at a critical point in the process you can be brought back. Whole and wholly human." With alarm, I noticed that the little blue light on Mulder's wrist had begun to flicker again. For a moment his eyes threatened to roll back in his head. I gripped the cold hand I still held more tightly. At the same time Ness placed her own slim hand on his barely rising chest. He came back but not without a struggle. His eyes roamed uneasily from the hovering Ness to me without comprehension. "Who?" the blue and cracked lips asked. "We're your friends, remember? Ness and Ben." One eyebrow cocked upwards. "Friends?" he mouthed as if he found the concept humorous, still the answer seemed explanation enough. "If I do this... could go wrong. Transformed, you said. Can't be good." The Jeremiah Smith form of Charley exchanged glances with me and shook his head ever so slightly. Even a dying man could interpret that message. "Have to kill me then..." the dying man said with surprising firmness. "Have to promise." "We aren't killers," Jeremiah protested. "I promise!" Ness's soft strained voice swore with cold conviction. His eyes went to her face, searching for truth. Her face was hard. It was the expression she wore when she remembered the slavery and torture so many had been forced into and the escape that had resulted in her dead child. He seemed to find what he was looking for. His eyes went to mine. He demanded reassurance that he would not be allowed to exist as an evil that would be the scourge of his people. But how could I do such a thing to Mulder? I had loved him, still loved him But then so had Ness and she had buried her baby and too many of her family in space. If I was going to give up the life of the hermit there was much that I was going to need to be willing to do for love. "It's hard," I said. "But I'll already be dead." I gave him what he wanted. Though he no longer knew me from Adam, I said the words. "I suppose there is no other way?" he asked of 'Charley' with a voice so weak now that the sound was barely that which a leaf makes when the wind blows it across dry ground. "No other way to both save your life and return you to Earth. Right now, the craft that are allowed to approach your world are being closely monitored. You have more than one ally but we are not in a position to help directly at the moment. Sometimes we are, but not now." The face softened in a way that Charley's never could. "I grieve for my part in this. I grieve that I cannot do more. This is not nearly compensation enough for all you have been through. But it is all that is within our power at this time. Can you forgive me?" Mulder's eyes had closed for a long moment. A deep pain crossed his face. When the eyes reopened his pale face wore a dazed expression. "What?" "Will getting you to Earth and sending word to have you picked up there to be restored be good enough?" Confusion replaced the dazed expression. "I know you. Jeremiah Smith. What. ?" Now he looked at Ness and me and with even less comprehension. He had begun to shake. "I'm so cold." I stared up at Charley in dismay but he only shook his head as his bowed shoulders bowed even more deeply. "Agent Mulder, you were hurt. These two are your friends. They've stood by you these months. But the truth is, your body is shutting down. You're dying. We've told you this before. Don't you remember?" "Scully --" "She isn't here but she's waiting for you." The lined face of this older Charley turned to us. In his hand was the little pressure spray that would deliver the virus. "The damage is accelerating. We don't have much time if there's going to be anything in his mind worth saving. There's a pattern for restoring muscle, not for recovering memory." The dry lips of the man on the pallet trembled. Fear held in the fiercest control possible was in the dark eyes and in the cold sweat of his brow. Mulder had heard and maybe he could even feel Death stalking him moving with furtive footsteps across the grass in the night. "He never said to go through with it!" Ness protested. "But you promised to give him what he asked for, you both did. So will I. I'll help you get back to Earth, to him, but we don't have time to go through it all again." Mulder understood enough to look scared, only he clearly did not have the strength to look as scared as he should have been. The little blue light could barely be seen and the beats I saw came slowly. "It has to be now!" Charley declared. "You won't be alone," I promised, the heavy, cold hand in mine. "We won't leave you." The lips etched up in the attempt at a smile but it was as if the effort was too much trouble and never quite got there. "Somehow I always knew... in the end... alone but for the kindness of strangers." Ness and I each grasped a hand though I don't know if he felt either. "Not alone and not strangers," I swore to which Ness, touching his hair now, eyes filled and glistening, added, "You'll just have to trust us." He tried harder to smile this time. Certainly something wry came alive in his face, an expression so dear and so familiar that I felt the tears that I had struggled so hard to hold back rise full and warm in my chest. "Trust... the magic word. Do this then, whatever 'this' is," and his eyes closed even as Charley drove the poison through his skin. A shudder went through him as if the potion burned like a thread of fire going in. His lips drew back in a grimace then moved one more time. I bent close to hear but there was not enough breath. Surprisingly, his hand closed over mine. It was probably only the muscles trembling. I say this because a set of spasms went through him then. It was different than the ones I'd seen before. This series began in the deepest part of him. I doubt that he felt any pain, but I'll never know because his face went still then as all personality drifted away like the drop of dew exposed to the summer sun. In time, his grip loosened, his hand fell to his side. The dim blue light on his wristband blinked more and more slowly. In a very few beats it went out and did not return. I was all at once aware of -- silence. The silence of an empty mind when I'd hadn't even been aware that I was receiving. Even as damaged as he was there had still been some connection, but not now. After some interminable seconds a woman's soft arms went around me. Her head came to rest against my shoulder that was all too soon wet with her tears. These, too, were silent. It was all I could do to leave him, just one more on the shelves in the room with so many others soon to be seeded like little pockets of infection on the planet of his birth. We placed him next to Billy with Theresa and Gary nearby. Kathy would not make this trip; she had not made it this far. Her uncertainties were at an end. Our last action was to fold up the blanket. We would have to take it away so he would look like all the others. He did look like the others, all pale or dusky flesh. More than a few had the same blackened and horrible wounds. Blanket clutched in her arms, back straight, Ness walked out with Charley. Only I lingered for one last look. I wish I hadn't. He looked so cold and, despite the company, so very alone. End of Chapter 8 MY TRAVELS WITH CHARLEY 9: Those Who Are About to Die (9 of 11) by Windsinger (Sue Esty) BENJAMIN: Epilogue As I remember, I made a scene the day that Mulder 'died'. When Mulder's mind faded into infinite silence I went into a kind of numb shock. That dam of numbness broke just as we were entering the long umbilical tunnel that would lead us back to Charley's ship. To Mulder's body behind so alone on City to be dispensed with like the others, like so many seeds. It was guilt, plain and simple. Easier to rail and weep over Charley's 'killing' him with his potions than to accept what could not be changed. I knew I was wrong; that he was only in deep hibernation to repair the damage before the metamorphosis that if all went well would never happen, that all would be well. That's logic, however, and emotions ripped raw can't reason like that. I clung to Ness all that long, dark trip between the silver of the slowly spinning station and Charley's ship. Bewildered and lost, not understanding in the least the hard soul of this soft creature that Mulder had brought me, I allowed her to tow me back. I lapsed back into my numb place after that until Ness and I and the nearly two hundred others arrived back on Dale. The large proportion of women made the new colonists welcome, that and the supplies that Charley brought in his confusing but familiar guise of the young Dan Rowe. There was metal, each ounce of iron as precious as gold, and preserved food because it was winter and we were bringing so many extra mouths to feed. Most blessed of all, he brought the promised remedy for the bleeding syndrome that had killed Dale's women. Why bring the refugees to Dale? Where else could the surviving members of Ness's family have gone? The pressures of the civilization on Earth would have been hell to them, or so I'm told. Besides, Earth was still closed to the alien faction that Charley belonged to, so he couldn't bring the more recent abductees home either. Dale was certainly what I needed. I didn't truly rouse from my stupor over Mulder's death until I took in that first lungful of bitingly crisp winter air. I at least had reached home safely, though not the person had I been so few weeks before. That was a phenomenally busy winter. Though we lived in shelters Charley sent down from the ship that were better in all respects than any cabin on Dale, we all knew they were temporary. It fell to me to teach and teach and teach. There was so much the new colonists needed to know. The Family who had lived all their lives on a space station had to learn that food would not just be delivered to you every morning through a little door in their 'habitat'. The abductees from Earth weren't much better prepared. Once free of their various prisons, they had assumed that their lives would get back to normal. They had to realize that food would never come wrapped in plastic or served in cardboard boxes. When winter's back was finally broken there would be so much to do. Ness and I were awkward with each other that winter though 'together'. Being together had been assumed from the first. The awkwardness came from neither of us being able to forget the oath we had sworn and how impossible it was going to be to fulfill. But there was more than the oath between us; there was Mulder. I knew how she had felt; to ask her to take second best was nearly as bad as being second best myself. If he had died I think it would have been easier. The thaw in Ness came one early spring day when she went outside to gather snow to melt and to watch the sunrise. At her feet, just one dot in the endless fields snow, a single blade of grass had struggled through . It was the very first time that she had ever seen a wild thing growing. It was as if something hard broke within her then. She knelt before that single bit of green and wept the tears that she had held since Mulder's 'death', when she had held the world together so a very large part of mine could fall apart. Her misery loosed a different kind of tightening in me and I was soon on my knees, arms around her. Heat rises to my face every time I think of the inane things we blubbered to each other but they must have been the right things. Simply put, life went on. Mulder was lost to us. He really always had been. What is real is so much better and you really don't have to give up one love for another. Parents love multiple children, after all, and each in his season. Someday we will get to Earth, Charley has promised it. After all we have at least one of several promises to keep. If Mulder is found by another of the Jeremiah Smith's of Charley group and he neutralizes the virus, the Mulder who lives again still won't be the Mulder either of us knew. In that case I need to tell him and Scully -- for, of course, they'll be together -- all about these lost months. For they will be lost. He had already forgotten me. His mind had also been a blank to me. I asked Charley if the mindspeech centers would grow back during the time of repair, after all, the genes were still there. Charley doubts it. The burnout was complete. Scar tissue laid down upon scar tissue. Like memories that will never return, the virus, after all, has to have something to work with. So maybe he's just a normal man now, but then a normal man was all he ever wanted to be. A normal man living with his Scully. That is what I'm hoping to find a normal, happy Mulder, whatever that is. There is the other horrible possibility that Charley's people don't find him in time and don't neutralize the virus. Then a very terrible something will have taken his place, the thing he has been fighting for so long. I refuse to think about what we promised to do then, but refusing to think about it doesn't mean that I've forgotten. Two years have passed. There is a new town not too far from my farm but not too close either. That first spring was an exhausting, incredible time. From bits of our shelters we made iron plows, which should have made the soil easier to turn but these new people were such pathetic farmers despite their enthusiasm that the planting took four times what it should have. Luckily, winter came late that year. I know that I didn't have time to think during the day... ah, but during the nights there was Ness, eternally excited by all she had done with the house during the day and in her own kitchen garden. At least one of us had the energy though I usually perked right up once she got me going though it didn't leave me many hours for sleep. We weren't the only ones preoccupied. With all the dating and pairing up between the colonists and old Dale dwellers, not to mention the changelings who now found the pressure less that they live predominantly female, it was a wonder that any crops got planted on Dale at all that year. Ness and I made it a point to harvest a lot of the river plant that resembles flax and I built her a loom during our first winter. It was one of our few joys that winter. While the colony exploded with pregnant women, Ness's abdomen remained flat. I don't know which of us was more depressed. Yes, she told me about what they had done, about the devil's bargain she had made to carry Mulder's baby, we just refused to admit the futility of our efforts, pleasant as they were in the short term. The colony as a whole held its breath when the babies started coming. Due to Charley's magic minerals, however, terrible bleeds were rare and mothers and babies thrived. Ness became a good midwife with practice though I never told her that she was welcomed into at least some of those homes out of pity. Meanwhile I carved toys that winter for all the children that would never be mine. Except for our lingering disappointment, it was a gorgeous spring. With the social groupings settled down, there was a staggering surge of energy in the colony. And meetings? Oh, yes, meetings. Minds educated on Earth spoke on the dangers of deforestation now that we had metal tools and a much larger and growing population. We needed to stick to the gifts of turf and rock and brick for building and find alternative methods to heat and light our cabins during the long winters. Yes, there were some 'heated' discussions but we felt alive and there was a smugness that with this early warning, we would prosper more smoothly than old Earth. Finally in the late spring, a gift. Val. A little boy only months old came to live with us -- temporarily. His mother, one of Ness's 'sisters' from the Family and now a neighbor, had been badly injured in a fall and could not care for the child until after her husband was free from the heavy farm chores. It eased the anguish a little. What I haven't mentioned were the dreams that from time to time woke me sweating and screaming in the night only to find myself in Ness's strong arms. In one I wake alone in a black and airless place, trapped, buried alive. Ness tries but her assurances not to be afraid aren't very convincing. Even though Charley visits now and again, he has received no news of what happened on Earth and we certainly can't expect any from any other source. I know where the dreams come from. Early on I asked during one of his visits, "What if your people dont find him. What if just any human does? What will their medical people think? What will they do? Charley was in his Jeremiah form, the one he used most of the time with us now. Everything showed on that face and that showed was grim. Theyll do their best to keep him alive. Thats the last thing we want. Theyll end up incubating the monster." His face grew no less grim. "Then there's the other possibility. That theyre going to think that they know death when they see it, I guessed with something like a rock in my stomach. I got a nod. We burn our dead on Dale because most of us die in the winter. The burning brings heat and light at a time of cold and dark. Not the worst way to go. But it would be a very final way to go for someone not quite dead. Do they burn bodies on Earth? I finally brought myself to ask. Sometimes. More often they bury the dead. The hairs went up on the back of my neck. Like the early colonists? In the dirt? In the ground? In a wooden box in the ground. Wood being less scarce there than here. They could do other irreversible things, but knowing him and thus knowing her, I think that once she had him in her arms and saw the state of him and all that he had suffered that she would want him touched as little as possible. There may, therefore, be a chance. He could live that way? For how long? "We can only guess. This is a new 'treatment'. A year, maybe two, a decade. The rebuilding will go on, slowly, anywhere. But, Benjamin, he won't wake, not without air." So that was where the first dream came from, not quite believing the not-waking-up part. Of course, it goes without saying that I also dreamed about the monster, Mulder's appearance but no soul, destroying all that Mulder loved. I always woke up from that one before I had to see that part of my promise through. No possible good endings to that dream. Clearly it was on my conscience that I had to get there, to find out. Either to see if he needed 'digging up', gruesome thought - - though leaving him there would be worse -- or to put him in his grave for good. But the blockade around Earth held so there was nothing even Charley could do to help. He waited just as we did. It was one evening during the crisp days of harvest time that I found Ness in the 'sauna'. That stone beehive that Mulder and I had built had become a very popular gathering place in winter. Ness and I and friends had added three rooms onto the cabin to accommodate all the guests that somehow always managed get stranded during blizzards. But on this day she was there alone, sewing and watching Val totter about on his wobbly legs. Her face was a shifting mosaic of emotions. Sorrow first. "What?" "Jareds coming to get Val in a few hours. Hannah is feeling better." "Oh, Ness, I'm sorry." She wiped at a tear. "No, it's time and actually fortuitous." Back straightening, another brighter emotion flicked into place. Expectation, almost excitement. "Ben, Charley's returned. Hes gathering the abductees. He can take them back to Earth, those who want to go and some do. There's a 'window of opportunity', as he calls it. Just that. The war goes on." I said nothing. "We can go, too. You know we have to see for ourselves what happened to Mulder and not just because of the promise we made. We both need to find some peace." The intensity in her was visible, just by the way she held herself. She was bothered almost as much about the nightmares as I was and had her own. "If the worst happened, if he 'changed', if he killed Scully --" I swallowed. I admit that I was afraid -- of leaving here, of risking our happiness, of what we might find, and other things. When I remained silent, Ness rose and took me in her arms. I know I was too stiff but I felt carved out of wood. Whats wrong? she asked, lifting her chin to look into my face. If we see him again, it may be hard. True, it could be terrible, weve discussed that. But even if everything is perfect. She read in my eyes what I couldnt say and forced a kind of smile. Dont tell me that youre still worried about that. You loved him. He was my first crush, besides, you loved him as well. He never returned it. Not in that way but he did love you as friend and brother. More than me. He barely tolerated me. I have more reason to be jealous than you. As far as finding him attractive again, Im sure I will. She pressed closer and touched my cheek. But he is a dream, a fairy tale. You are real and whole and strong and handsome and I am proud of you and being with you. You are bone of my bone. You are where my heart lies. I don't see any of that changing. That is the way of it. And in that tone of voice, the words might as well have been carved in stone. Ness was a woman who knew her mind and, yes, wed had this conversation before but still it was good to hear it again. I am a fool. But my fool. Now come. Even though Jerad will take care of the farm until we get back, there is still much to do." I was glad that she had it all arranged in the same way that she set her mind to everything, just as, I realized, she had set her mind on me from the first time I unclothed before her on that hillside on Rock Four. I felt a blush rising and stooped to kiss her, the kiss quickly deepening into something more for both of us. Some men would be set back by her brashness but to me it was part of her being Ness. It was her way and I didn't mind. It was a need in her to 'do' after so many years of helpless inactivity. Later as we lay in our rope bed just the size for two to snuggle, I tried one last time to reassure her. "We'll find him, he'll be fine." The words though were empty. How could I give assurance when I had none myself. Utah, United States Three years after Mulder's 'death' We came down in the beam at night as soft as petals falling in spring. But it was not spring on this my first trip to my ancestral home. The baked, stone-hard earth under my feet still throbbed with the blistering heat of the sun. Dale being a cool place I was glad not to arrive during the day, still I was frustrated. I wanted so much to see. Not that I couldn't see, their huge moon was a brilliant white jewel in the sky so bright that I thought at first that it was another, if distant sun. And the stars, the stars were glorious even if the constellations were different that those I had known all my life. While Charley spoke softly with someone on a communication's device, Ness and I found what I thought was the Big Dipper. Mulder had described it to me on that night, years before, when we lay before sleep and stared at the sky above the garden behind Max's surgery. Over our heads loomed great cliffs of red-gold stone to which a few scrubby bushes grew. "I thought Earth was suppose to be this green and growing garden?" I remarked, disappointed. "Charley showed me on the map where we'd be coming down. Most of the Earth that isn't ocean is green. This is a desert region in a state called Utah. It's in the same country where Mulder came from though far from where he grew up and usually worked." I put my arm around her strong, slender form. She rested her head on my shoulder. I was happy and proud that she had a chance to display her knowledge. For so much of the year the learning of all her early years lay fallow, like an off-year field as we concentrated on the physical labor of just producing the food that we needed for survival. The winter we had spent together had been glorious. There was so much she had to teach me that she had learned in City from the Fathers and Mothers. I let her be my guide then since her group had kept alive so much more of Earth than Dale. Dale had had neither the time nor heart for any but the most practical education in its battle to survive both the climate and the tragic deaths of its women and children. "He's coming," Charley said. In a few moments I heard footsteps on the sandy ground. I knew this would not be Mulder but someone who could tell us about him. We had that much information. Still I braced myself for my first sight of the figure. I could tell just by his silhouette that he was a big man, tall and broad-shouldered and fit but with little or no hair on a well-shaped head. Finally in the light I saw a strong face but wary. There was no doubt about his intelligence and he had the look of a man who commands even if he wasn't wearing what I knew from computer images on the ship was a kind of military uniform. "Director Skinner," Charley said extending a hand in the human way. After a moment's hesitation during which time he had to pull his eyes from where Ness and I huddled together, this Skinner turned to the shapeshifter. "Colonel Skinner now," he corrected then, "Jeremiah Smith?" for Charley was wearing his 'Jeremiah' shape so as not to alarm those who had known the Bounty Hunter, Rodan. "Call me 'Charley', the name Mulder gave me. Though I resemble Jeremiah for you, 'Jeremiah Smith' rightly belongs to my predecessor." "Who was himself taken by your people only a few days after Mulder was returned and before he could heal him." "Not my people. Another faction. And, no, he's not been heard of since. He was probably tortured; he could be dead or as good as. We're considered criminals by the wrong people. We consider them criminals, too, only there are just so many more of them." Skinner's alert eyes turned to us. "You knew Mulder during his abduction?" "One or the other of us for most of the time, Colonel Skinner, sir," I said using my best polite speech such as I would use to an elder. "And how long was that?" "Considering the half a year on Dale that I knew him, the time he was on City with Ness and the months before that on the Portjam with Billy and the others, we have information on about fifteen months." Skinner's eyes widened. "For us Mulder was missing only half that time. Time being relative, our physicists have calculated that only a few days may have passed from his point of view. That's what we had hoped." "Then your physicists need to look at their figures again." "None of that matters," Ness snapped with irritation. "He must have made it back then! How is he? And Scully, did they find each other?" The stern face of this commanding man if anything hardened. He held up a hand, "Wait," and spoke into the communications device he carried. Instead of the softly spoken question being answered, a second figure emerged from the dark. This one was a boy, shorter than I though taller than Ness, with intense eyes in a round face that didn't go with the rest of him. Older than a child but not yet a man. Oddly, I felt my mind itching as if someone were reading it, which couldn't happen, not here. Could it? "They are who they say they are, Colonel." My head itched more fiercely as the boy continued, "And the knowledge they carry it's incredible." For the first time, the stern face of Skinner changed, crumbling on the edges with some strong but fiercely contained emotion. "So it's true," he breathed. "There is so much we need..." He took a deep breath to steady himself. "I blamed myself for his being taken. For what he went through. Now he can fill in the holes, so can we all. But what do you say, Gill?" he asked the boy. "Should he be told? Would knowing be worse? He doesn't need any more grief." The far-off-seeing eyes of the boy were like those in the picture of Buddha I'd seen in the computer. He shook his head. "It's horrible and amazing but he has the right. He certainly has the need." Ness was shaking in her impatience. "Tell me! So Mulder's alive. He's well and happy?" The face of the big man in uniform was thoughtful. "Alive, yes. Physically, well? Yes. Happy? No one could say that, not completely. Maybe your news will help." End of Chapter 9 (Now we return and will end with Mulder's story.) MY TRAVELS WITH CHARLEY 9: Those Who Are About to Die (10 of 11) by Windsinger (Sue Esty) MULDER: Epilogue Morning. I'm not even out of bed and Skinner is bringing visitors. Visitors are rare enough but after another bad night I am not at my best. You would think that having Scully in my bed would help -- oh, it does -- it's just that I can't help thinking how bad and empty that place would be if she were not. I know that I can't help but reach out and hold on when the chill creeps across my skin and sinks deep into my bones. It's the grave come again. And that's what it's like when I'm awake! The terrors that come in sleep are another matter. It's my spirit the demons are after then and the vast dark for my soul. Yes, since my 'return' I am finally convinced that I have a soul, or had one. Either I lost it or it's too damn scared to come out. How else can I explain how dead I feel inside, for dead is all I feel when I'm so absolutely terrified. Scully's euphemism for this is that I'm 'in a mood'. I wonder if she knows how hard I try not to be in this particular mood for her though now that we're together constantly, it's impossible to keep up the pretense. I know that Gibson -- correction, Gill, as this maturing child prefers being called -- has talked to her about those months when I went into hiding to save my life and hers and William's. He had to have told her of a depression so bleak that I didn't wash or rise from the stifling, dusty couch in his little New Mexico trailer for weeks at a time. I just laid there getting hairier, and grungier, and grumpier by the day, obsessing over and over about all the ways that I had fucked up my life and yours. But the prime topic was always my stupidity in Oregon and even more the constant wondering over what happened to me during those months of dark. What was done to me? What was I forced to do? What am I still capable of? Brain washing comes to mind. At any time some post hypnotic suggestion may come leaping out and then murder, mayhem. In this day and age is it possible for one man to open the gates and let in the invasion force? You get the picture. And it would all go around and come back, go around and come back. Again and again. Going no where. The only thing that would bring me out of my funk was for Gill to pull me out into a cloudburst. Something about the night and the thunder and lightning and the bone-chilling, driving rain touched 'something'. Only what? What? WHAT! Damn! How can 'nothing' be so mountainously huge? I have retained a few images, though none that you'd want to write to the folks back home about. I'm pinioned like an insect on a rock; nothing else could be so uncomfortable and -- oh, gods, the pain. Bright metal arms come towards me. Arms ending, not in hands, but in glittering laser and probe, saw and knife. They connect -- though my mouth and into my brain mostly, but then there's the saw cutting though the skin of my breast above the breastbone. Terror and agony and the spray of blood. Maybe I could live with this -- torture I've known -- but there was more, much more before I 'died'. How do I know? I get these flashes of deja vu -- 'already seen' -- coming out of left field. Everyone has them but not like mine. I've taken to writing them down before they evaporate like mist. I have quite a list. Besides standing in the rain in the dark during thunderstorms, there's bland food (I've taken to adding so much hot sauce that I'm accused, laughing, to being one of those aliens from 'Roswell'), the color brown (particularly when it comes to food), and pink sponges (doesn't get me out of cleaning, Scully buys yellow ones). I can't sit on a lawn wearing shorts; the feel of the grass blades touching my skin drives me mad. I never use to take medicine without a fight but now I down four Tylenol at the first hint of a headache and usually my hands are shaking so badly by the time I get to the medicine cabinet that I can barely get the childproof cap off. A night sky full of stars awakens something so painful to me that I cry, every time. There are days when I feel like I'm falling apart. Image upon image upon image and each with the emotional impact of a bullet and just as quick and just as shocking. However did my serene Scully deal with her lost time? I feel so useless, so pathetic next to her strength, but then she always has been the strong one. I was just the obsessed one. "We all manage in our own way, Mulder. And I wasn't so together for quite a few years. I didn't let you in, did I? Needed you, leaned on you, but couldn't let you in. Takes time." I fear that for me 'getting over it' is going to take forever. This has been no delayed PTSD from some forgotten childhood trauma; this had been immediate! I have been a wreck from the moment I woke up to the sight of Scully's tear-stained face. Nearly eight months pregnant! If only I could have accepted it from the start as a miracle. If only I could have shown at that first moment that I was truly happy for her. Instead it was as if I were made of wood. Why? Maybe it was shock but I couldn't feel. It was as if I were an alien looking in on a play in a language I couldn't understand. I know now that part of the reason why I kept my distance was because I didn't want to contaminate her with what I had become. After all, she was life, perfect life, and I was -- death. It certainly felt as if I was still dead inside. I was no good to her, little good to myself, absolutely no good for the X-Files. I didn't care, I didn't fight, I let it go. I threw it away and fell back on the quest, the quest, and the future to save. To save for someone if not for me. Oh, and, yes, I did leave her and William to keep them safe but to keep from dying again myself, that was a part of it. Of course that was then. No one's going to kill me here, unless I take that little task into my own hands. So I get up in the morning and take just enough anti-depressants to get me through the day with half a brain cell running. That reminds me, got to get up. Skinner's coming with visitors. I roll out. Dress. From Skinner's voice this sounds pretty important. Shit, what do I care. I throw on the clothes I took off the day before. Are they also the clothes I wore the day before that? At least they are clothes. I shuffle blearily down to the commissary to get coffee and a bagel. A few hands wave but no one speaks to me. They know better when there are purple shadows under my eyes, at least not until I've had coffee and time to absorb it. The food choices aren't many but a long way from the stale bread and rancid peanut butter that Gill and I lived on in New Mexico. At least then, however, I had the sky. No sky here two hundred feet below ground. That I would live like this, protected by the fucking government from the fucking government. How did that happen? I know I had nothing to do with it. Not directly anyway. As I sit with the mug warming my chilled hands I run down the short version in my mind. Facts are comforting. MUFON, NICAP, and all those other organizations that believed in the existence of extraterrestrial life from the beginning are far from the crackpots the media would lead you to believe. Their founders were some of the first on the silicon bandwagon and instead of buying fancy cars, fancy mansions and fancier boy/girl toys put their money in a more practical direction. And so was born a large, well-funded extremely hush-hush federation that knew quite well what the government refused to admit and thus decided early on to have nothing to do with it except to bleed telemetry off their satellites. Sound like anyone you know? Yes, the Lone Gunmen of sad memory were charter members from the early days, at least Langley and Frohike were. Age, race, religion, sex, nationality were no barrier since so few actually met face to face, praise the Internet. (Who do you think REALLY got it started?) Of course, they had their radical fringe of UFO crazies. Some were real, some just playing a part, both were smoke screen, a deliberate campaign to discredit the group to those who didnt know better. They did a good job. Interesting what Max Fenig said about Agent Mulder's career being so closely watched. Between my expense accounts and the Gunmen all of my activities and everything in the X-Files pretty much found its way into their databases, yet they never let me in. Too dangerous for me as well as too dangerous to their secret. I was too visible, too high profile. Too much of a loose cannon even for the lunatic fringe. Of course when I went underground that was another story, though by then much more had changed. My old friend Senator Matheson was their first contact with the legitimate government. That ended badly. Later contacts were more subtle and included meticulously scrutinized members of the military, NSA, CIA, and, most importantly, the Department of the Treasury, especially the IRS. How else do you think they kept their millions so safely hidden. Kersh's epiphany on the last day of my 'trial'? He wasn't the first to finally see the light and realize that humanity and civilization, in particular the U.S. government, had somehow lost control. How did Scully and I eventually 'link' up with this super-MUFON- NICAP group? We were contacted outside our Roswell motel the morning after Spender's certain death in the ruins and our narrow escape. We were enlisted over a two-egg special with hash browns and a bowl of Grape Nuts Flakes. It wasn't difficult -- we really had no where else to go. By this time, the loose Internet web had developed a head, a central mind, referred to simply as, the Mind, with a very soft 'd'. In other words, The Mine. We were driven in a luxurious RV to Utah and give a grand tour of their new headquarters. You know those radio ads you've heard about Yuka Mountain? The central depository of all nuclear waste in our country? I'm standing right in the middle of it, well, beside it actually. It does make a kind of sense. As you can imagine no one bothers us and we have unlimited nuclear power, unlimited funding, and all the space we want by just extending the tunnel system. We also have some of the best brains in the country. Supplies come in and out in military trucks all the time to support the 'public' work of the Mountain and what's a few million dollars in misplaced equipment a year to a government accounting office as fucked up as ours is. We're well-shielded, of course. There's a hundred times more protection around this place than what most physicists would define as sufficient even for people living here 24/7. At least that's what they tell me. What I'm saying is that The Mind finally had to allow itself to be acknowledged as a secret though civilian branch of the government. They had to once they found out that Yuka Mountain was also sitting on one of the country's most concentrated deposits of Magnetite. See, there was a good reason for us to end up with such swell accommodations. How this happened was that more than a dozen years ago, long before the coming of the Universal Soldiers, one man was smart enough to recognize that the shadow government that had been tasked since Roswell to keep this ET thing quiet was in danger of getting out of control. A significant number of career military and Men in Black (the real ones, not the movie ones) had begun splintering off into activities secret even from each other. Half of those remaining were more interested in job security than in the threat. The other half were too arrogant and narrow-minded to believe that Humanity could be defeated. In turns ineffectual and paranoid, the shadow government had itself become a target. That visionary was Bill Mulder. It was his plan, put into action only after his death, to allow the aliens to think themselves so clever. They would be allowed to infiltrate the shadow government all they wanted. Meanwhile the real work would be done elsewhere. Only where and by whom? Through that open door walked the Mind and all its Internet dot- coms. That's how all those geeks came to be working here in the Mountain and shrink-wrapped by a special branch of government security posing as protectors of the national nuclear waste dump. Now how to keep such a thing quiet? Amazing how well you can keep a secret if you know going in that you only need to keep it for ten years. That's not very long in the scheme of things. This means that, yes, they've known the invasion date for twenty years, suspected it for longer. What that amounts to is that I infiltrated that shadow government base for nothing. I went through that horror of prison and the extraction of my 'confession' and trial and dragged Scully and Skinner through that hell for nothing. I nearly died (again) and for what? I was invited in here only after I'd burned all my bridges behind me. A charity case. And Scully wonders why I'm depressed. As if aware of my thoughts, there she is. She's clearly come to this dingy commissary looking for me because she heads directly to the table where I'm hunkered down with my coffee waiting for the caffeine to take effect. Something's going on for she is transformed. Not changed in any outward way but she glows from the inside with -- what? Expectation? Only then do I remember Skinner's message. The medication makes it hard to think sometimes. "Mulder..." and the tone is her old chiding one, no pity. "Come on, you have to shave, wear something clean at least." I let her pull me up unresisting. I'm not put off by her gentle nagging. It's the undercurrent of excitement I follow. The dreary clouds over my soul actually lift a little. "Who are these people?" We're in our 'suite' now, small, but all ours. "Wait, you already know!" I exclaimed as she urges me towards the small bathroom. "Why tell you and not me?" When she doesn't answer immediately I mulishly stop dead, ignoring her urging. "Scully, I'm not a child." She knows that the game has gone far enough. "Shave, I'll tell you. Skinner asked me to anyway so that it wouldn't be so much of a shock." "That bad?" "No, good news." Her brilliant eyes dimmed uneasily then. "News at least. 'Good' we'll have to determine later." "You're driving me crazy here." "Shave." I reach for the electric razor. You can probably guess why I don't use a straight edge any more. My choice, by the way. Scully never asked and I never told her that on some days when I still had access to razor blades, the temptation had become almost too great. Thirty seconds and it's done -- she didn't say that it had to be a good job -- and clothes are off, too. Possessively, she runs a hand over my chest now that the shirt is off. "Better stop that if you don't want him to find us otherwise engaged." That was one part of our lives that amazingly hadn't suffered. After eight years of barely touching, it's like we can't keep our hands off each other. It also helps that if we're touching we're not talking which means that I don't have to answer questions like how am I feeling. She gives me a long serious kiss of love, not passion, and I slide on clean clothes of my own choice --jeans, black T-shirt. The ones she likes. She doesn't complain. "Not formal then. No military types?" "Only Skinner. And its personal, not business." "It's not about your Mom, is it?" Scully sits gingerly on the edge of the one upholstered chair in our sitting area. "No, she's safe in her safe house on the Outer Banks, at least until the first hurricane comes." I force myself to sit across from her on the battered couch that already knows my shape. My hands slip between my knees to keep them from fidgeting. "You are driving me crazy here." "It's hard." She takes a deep breath. "Two people have come. One of Jeremiah's Smith's faction brought them through. A young man and a young woman. They knew you -- during the time of your abduction." It's fortunate that I am already sitting down because I'm suddenly shaking so badly that I would otherwise have been on the floor. Scully is beside me now, arms around me though I don't remember her moving. "How do we know they're for r-real?" My voice is as unsteady as the rest of me. "Even if they were there, how can they remember anything? Theresa Hosie can't remember any more than I can." "Clearly, these two have a better travel agent that you and Theresa and Gary and Billy did. They came direct." Shit and shit. "Still, how can we be sure? They could be anyone. I've been fooled before." "Skinner took Gill. Gill says that they're legit." A tightness in my chest that had been with me since I first woke from the dead at Scully's side relaxes enough for me to take what feels like my first deep breath in three years. That would do it. I sat for a long moment then, staring at the huge mural on our one bare wall. It's of desert scrub and defiant red rock up thrusting into the purest of blue skies. All at once I can't breathe again and jump up, a little unsteadily, to flip on a bank of fluorescent bulbs. The setup helps the claustrophobia that comes with always being so far underground. White light floods the room. My thoughts are circling in crazy ways. I pace. It's not far, three paces East and three West. I see her sitting there so alone and so I come and sit and hold her against me. She is everything real that is real at that moment. We sit that way, silent, holding on. Finally, she draws away but only so that she can speak. "So now you'll know," she says softly. "What then, Tiger?" I shrug, or maybe it's a shiver. "Will it matter to know what happened," she asked, "or is it only the not knowing that's the problem?" "I don't know. What if I find that they brainwashed me into killing hundreds, or thousands." I force a glitter into my eye. "Or into having sex with dozens and dozens of women." "Don't make jokes about that." "If it happened, would that matter to you?" Her hand comes to rest on my cheek. "If it kept you safe, if it kept you from feeling alone and lost, I would have wished you that kind of release a thousand times." And she is perfectly serious. That earned her another kiss, a long one. When we finally parted, which was just shy of the point of no return, I was on my knees before her, my arms still full of the slight steel of her. Crying again, like a fool. How could I have treated her so coldly those months immediately after my return? True, I'd been a mess, but to put up such walls after all she had suffered, and later to abandon her and our son! "Mulder, I understand," she assures me as she has a dozen times since with the kind of unflappable logic that can still cut. "You 'were' a danger to us!" "I should have found another way. I've been a target before." As before, she touches me -- runs her fingers through my hair this time -- and absolves my guilt, saying that I was not to blame, that I was still reeling back and forth between depression and shock. Sorry, that is no excuse! If I'm as intelligent as I'm reported to be, I should have found a way to keep us all safe! As a result of my selfish, short-sightedness, because of my failure, she was forced to give up the miracle child, the dearest to her of all possible hopes and dreams. Only a total scum would have done what I did. The poorest possible excuse for a human being much less a father. And I had had my own dreams. I had wanted to be such a good father. Maybe I should have expected failure in that arena just like in the rest of my life considering the role models I had. As if she can follow the well-worn tracks of illogic that my mind is following, her strong hands cupped my face. "Love, stop it." God... even now, in the midst of our love making, it's in me. Will it always be this way, vacillating between pretended happiness and intimacy and real happiness and intimacy, between the blackest depression and still blacker despair? Her touch and the smell of her, like her voice, is ever my reality and brings me back. "You could have done better. You couldn't have done much worse." "But you're the man I love, the only one I ever could love." Which is a mystery it took me months to understand. Not only how deeply she had suffered but also how badly she needed me to let her in, that she needed my joy in order to truly feel her own. What a perfect traitor! So eventually I did my best to put a kind of smile on the pain, and not just with pizza man jokes. I really tried, I still do, every day, and I am continually overwhelmed when I get back ten times my effort in her happiness. "You still think I can be saved?" "You tell me. As I asked before, will knowing help?" With a sigh I roll to sit on the floor at her feet my back against her legs. "What you're asking is what I'll obsess on next after I've filled this particular black hole in my life." I shrug. "I don't know. What if there's nothing left inside? They don't need me here. I'm just an icon, half of a zombie that they see that they need to save the world from." She has continued to combing her fingers through my hair. Now she gives a sharp tug. "Ouch!" She spins me around, her little fist clenched in my collar. "Imbecile, of course they need you! They need your twisty, brilliant mind and your bad jokes. They need your suspicious nature. They've been waiting. I'VE been waiting, and for the real you, not just a rolling mass of darkness sprinkled here and there with sugar and spice." "Dana, I can't promise. This is too huge. I need to hear what these two people have to say." "No, no matter what these people have to say, you still have to work your way out of this, AND you have to succeed. I won't accept anything less." And she lets me know exactly how determined she is about this. After a few moments, the intercom in our room wakes up disturbing her demonstration of just how decisive this woman can be and how that turns me on. End of Chapter 10 MY TRAVELS WITH CHARLEY 9: Those Who Are About to Die (11 of 11) by Windsinger (Sue Esty) Author's Note: There is a brief mention her of Joseph and Sara, Mulder and Scully's alternate selves from my All Hallow's Eve series. If you remember back to My Travels with Charley 5: The Messenger, Joseph come to Scully on Halloween to offer her comfort. MULDER: Epilogue (continued and the end) "Good morning, Moles," an irritatingly peppy female voice announces. "Walter Skinner is in the hole with important visitors. Let's make them welcome but try not to disturb them with endless questions. They can't stay long." The voice had a definite Disney Academy quality to it. Scully breaks the suction of our kiss and our bodies, partially to stop from laughing. "Harold's youngest?" I ask? "That's my guess and you'd better get used to it. She wanted to be a radio personality before her father had to drag her in here for her own protection." 'Walter' also sounded odd but within 'the hole' even military titles were dropped. Civilian-managed, it was intended that the military would have little jurisdiction except to maintain the perimeter. Considering how much I believe that line you can image what a godsend it was when Skinner agreed to re-enlist and become our liaison after his forced 'retirement' from the FBI. "I hope he doesn't mind the disrespect," I murmured. "Despite his protests that he only joined up again to give us someone we could trust to work with, I suspect that he privately likes being called Colonel." "It's the fatigues," my Scully whispered conspiratorially, who had left her suits behind in favor of jeans more than a year before. "Certainly more comfortable than a coat and tie." "Or the shoes," I agreed, wiggling my toes in my disreputable sneakers. As we talked, more to kill time than anything, we had both been nervously straightening the room. Unfortunately, that didn't take long because we didn't have much. With a touch Scully changed our picture 'window' to the wallpaper image in our collection that was greenest and the brightest -- rolling farmlands. It was one of my favorites though for the life of me I couldnt tell you why. On my screensaver before my abduction I had always leaned towards rugged seacoasts, mountains and storms. Now such bucolic scenes had found themselves into the mix. Surprisingly, they made me sad as if I had lost something. I wrapped my arms around Scully's slender frame and held on as I gazed at it. That sadness came on me again and a kind of peace. But why? Questions. So many questions. Even though we were expecting it, we both jumped when the door softly buzzed announcing the visitors. Suddenly unable to move, I let Scully go to the door to play hostess. I don't know what I expected; somehow not these two normal- looking young people. The male was as tall as I, dark-haired, tanned a golden brown, good-looking in the boy-next-door sort of way and sleekly muscular, mid-twenties if that. The girl was just that, a girl, as small as Scully but blond with fair skin that was probably as tanned as it ever would be. Pretty but not gorgeous. Both bursting with health, they made the perfect pair. Didn't fit with abductees. Unconsciously, I had prepared myself for refugees from a concentration camp. It was only after greeting Scully, whom they were surprisingly exuberant to meet, did they turn their eyes to me. Their eyes. Their eyes, their souls, were years older than their bodies. They had seen 'things'. I don't know how I knew but I just knew. Skinner must have filled them in on me and my peculiarities because they didn't rush forward. The girl approached first. She moved slowly, those eyes on my face, hesitating before taking my hand. Hers was cool and trembled. "We left our home, our people, we traveled millions of miles, but it was all worth it just to know that you're alive, that you're okay." I wouldn't know about the okay part. The young man a head taller beside her touched my shoulder as if not entirely sure that I wouldn't disappear. "It is you." "Then you really did know me?" "Oh, yes," they exclaimed, and laughed nervously as the words came out together and with exactly the same inflection. Instinctively, I glanced at Gill, my truthteller. He was grinning with eager excitement, a rare emotion in that serious young man. All was well then. The weight of suspicion released with a totally unexpected rush of emotion. "Tell it all," I said though the request must have been hard to hear over the frantic beating of my heart. "Then let's start," the girl, Ness, said, "because we don't have much time. We have to leave by late tomorrow or miss our ride home." So they talked and talked as I sat on the worn cloth sofa with Scully pressed beside me, hand in mine. They apologized that the first part would probably be erratic but neither of them had actually been there, so the young man, Benjamin, eventually began reciting from my 'journal'. My blood literally ran cold to hear my own words, full of hurt and my desperate loneliness and longing for Scully, come out of another man's mouth. Scully was entranced and silent until he got to the section about the 'sponge', the isolation tank and the brain scan that was performed in an attempt to find out what had happened to my mindspeech centers. All at once she latched onto my hand with such force that her fingernails went through the skin of my palm. "The message I received on Halloween! It was true then!" It was as if she had broken the trance that have wove around me as well. "Damn! What were we thinking? We should be taping this!" Skinner stilled the room with a raised hand. "Don't bother. Do you think that you are ever not under surveillance? His eyes lowered in apology. For you own protection, of course." I glared at him making it plain that, though this solved the immediate problem, we would be talking about that particular policy later. It was clear that we wouldn't have missed much anyway. Our two visitors were just getting started. Ness did some of the talking now, her own story. Skinner had coffee and food brought in but no one could eat much and no one was going to sleep. When Ness talked of the deal she had made to be allowed to have a baby, Scully began trembling so strongly that I had to put an arm around her shoulders. Talk about the Lady or the Tiger... Would I by the end of this tale lie with this girl or not? When we reached the point where I was spirited away by Charley, virtue intact, I felt no triumph. Flying lessons! The next section was about flying lessons. Talk about theater of the absurd! Skinner came alive and looked at me in a way he never had before, with sheer wonder and amazement. "This means that you could help them at Ellens to fly those things." At my glare he amended his outburst with, "At least help them to see if they're put those aircraft together right. This could be a huge help to our defense." Please, don't go there. Okay, maybe later. Ill consider it, when this had begun to feel less like a fairy tale. The story of my time on Dale was long but, at least in the beginning, brought the same kind of respite to those who listened to it as it had brought to me when I had lived it. As Ben went on in his soft Dale country accent, Scully looked curiously from the speaker to me and back again. Yeah, she had caught on to the parts he had carefully left out, too " that solitary young mans attraction for his houseguest, his 'newcomer'. The episodes of torture that followed I can deal with; it was the growing back of the mindspeech centers that I found most disturbing but said nothing. Neither did Scully who dreaded going through that again as much as I did. Charley's return was not unexpected but to find that Charley and Mr. Stone-face Bounty Hunter were sometimes but not always the same person was a revelation and explained a lot. Scully cheered without reservation at the news of Ness's pregnancy but her cheer was cut short as Ness stared at the floor and Ben's tanned face reddened. That joy was going to be short lived and in truth the tale did not end well for everyone, certainly not for me and Ness and Ben, though it ended as well as could be expected, I suppose. It felt weird to hear about what the other four and I had attempted. Considering that almost all the prisoners lived, I suppose you could say that the attempt was successful. Still Kathy had died, and later Gary, and Billy had died horribly after his even more horrible transformation. And I had 'died' and only by sheer dumb luck recovered, if the life I've led since can be called recovery. But Ben and Ness didn't ask about that; Skinner must have told them on the way here. So Charley was actually wrong," the former assistant director concluded. "There ARE invasion plans, and a date set which we are flying towards even now. Not just infiltration and maneuvering. Destroying the research station didnt postpone any of that. Unfortunately thats true, Ben said. It turns out that his faction is not entirely trusted after all. They didnt know about the invasion date. According to Charley, however, you will be in a much better position now when the time does come than if slave mentality had had a decade to infect the population. You prevented that. Earths people will be less likely to lose heart and give in. Weve also had 9/11, Scully considered. Western civilization, in particular the United States, has not been the same since then. Given a cause, the people will fight, they will sacrifice. We wont be the soft, easy kill we might have been. "Still," I said, my voice numb with shock, "raising that huge ship, it should have meant more." "It was enough," Ben said, gripping his wife's hand tightly and gazing into his eyes. "You brought me Ness. You saved hundreds, and I'm not even counting the children that will come after." I found that the two travelers were looking at me with hero worship in their eyes. Even Scully's green orbs were glowing though Skinner and Gills smug expressions indicated that they had privately suspected something as dramatic as this all along. What I heard was not the stuff of heroes, just the account of common people doing what had to be done. I guess in the end that that's usually the case. Scully suddenly sat up ramrod straight. "Mulder, if Billy hadn't shown up alive when he shouldn't have been alive, and if Skinner hadn't exhumed your body --" "Then you would be on your way to North Carolina now," I finished. Talk about footsteps on your grave; I could feel every one in my bones. Scully was on her feet, hugging Ness, hugging Ben and thanking them both. Awkwardly, I got to my feet, or tried to, to do the same. For some reason my legs weren't working. Ben came to help me up but held on, hands clasped once I was swaying beside him. It took a moment for me to realize that he was speaking. "Please, we need a favor," he whispered. I'm sorry that this has to be so sudden, but we don't have much time." We were so close that I could smell the scent of his world on him skin and felt a surge as, unbelievably, it triggered a memory of dark turned earth and new spouted grass. "Anything," I stammered. "Anything you need." Then I caught Scully's eyes, which were achingly huge and brimming with tears. Ness had made their request to her already. "What?" I asked. Scully answered. "They want a child, Mulder. You heard. Ness can't have Benjamin's. You're the only one who can give them one." There was suddenly no air in my lungs. "WE'RE the only ones who can give them one," came stumbling out. "You're part of this, too." She was in my arms. "And I agree!". "Scully, do you know what this means?" "Of course, I do. A child of yours, away from here, off this battlefield. Safe. How could I not want that?" There was no time to think, only time to feel the need of the woman pressed against my body. I could barely look at the hopeful faces of yet another couple who would raise a child of mine without me. "My sperm may not be normal," I warned them. "Is that why you haven't had another child with Scully?" Ben exclaimed, wading directly in the quicksand of a topic that we had been skirting for more than a year. "That and where we live," I snapped back. "A stone's throw from a few megatons of nuclear waste gives a person pause." "Only you can make that decision. As for us, we've all been tampered with; we'll take the risk. And who knows, the effect could be beneficial. We'd be happy if he turned out anything like his father." "His biological father," Ness corrected, poking a slender finger against her lover's chest for emphasis. "You'll be his father -- or her father." A sharp pain stabbed at my heart and closed my eyes. Maybe it was dark but I wasn't alone. Scully pulled my head down and planted her lips on mine. How could I have forgotten? Scully, my center, my touchstone, was with me and that kiss went all the way to my soul. Yes, I guess I have one after all. "Okay," I whispered into her ear, even as I bit down gently on the lobe, "but I may need a little help. It's been a long day and a long night after all." Her hand snaked down slender fingers slipping inside the waistband of my jeans. "I think that that could be arranged." It took an hour, only an hour, and the deed was done and the two were gone like willow-the-wisps. It's amazingly how quickly these things can be arranged. Not wanting to wait a moment, Ness and Ben had floated down to the 'Hole's' little infirmary to have everything ready when Skinner -- an odd mid-wife to be sure -- arrived with the little sterile cup. They were whisked off by Skinner moments later to make their rendezvous with Charley. Ness made the entire trip from infirmary to Skinner's van reclining. She probably made the entire trip to the spaceship in the same fashion to give the insemination a better chance of 'taking'. The last I saw of them, Ben was holding his wife's hand and both were smiling like idiots. As the 'harvest' was plentiful, the med tech only used a portion. The remainder was flash frozen and will be stored on Charley's ship for future brothers and sisters. Ben assures me that a lot of hands are needed to run a farm. That left just Gill with Scully and I and since Scully clearly had words for me I parted with Gill at the door to our 'suite'. "Ben was right in that he has no small amount of what they call mindspeech himself," Gill confirmed to me in his soft voice after Scully had taken a few steps inside. "I was able to 'download' all of the 'journal' from his mind just as you gave it to him so we can fill in the parts they edited out." "And I suppose that you want to 'read' me those parts?" The boy, now a young man, tilted his over-sized head. "Maybe that won't be necessary. Maybe some day you'll be able to read it from mine." My heart skipped half a dozen beats. "No!" "Mulder, you had such a bad experience with Spender that I didn't want to mention it but I always wondered if it could grow back or had already grown back. If the virus repaired everything else, why not? It's just not activated yet. Now that we know that your talent is controllable, it could be activated again -- " "No, no, no." "You could save the world. You could save Scully." Hero stuff again, shit, and there was Scully standing at the door with something very definitely on her mind. Double shit. Gently, I pushed Gill down the corridor. "Later, we'll talk later." 'What was I thinking?' I wondered as the door closed, but there was Scully waiting, hair like fire, eyes like flame. Thinking would have to wait until later. She took my hand and sat me down. Surprisingly, we didn't talk for some time. There were a host of thoughts behind those beautiful eyes. I would wait and let her begin; I'd only mess it up if I started. When she began speaking it wasn't where I thought she would. "Does it ever amaze you how similar our lives are now to those of -- Joseph and Sara?" My eyes opened wide. We didn't discuss Joseph and Sara mostly because I thought Scully didn't entirely believe in them. They were us in an alternate time line. According to Scully, however, Joseph had, in a round about way, been the one who had come to her on the All Hallow's Eve when I was missing and gave her the message that I was alive. It had been some comfort to her during her own dark times. Secretly, I gave credit for the memory to the continued spicing of the air at that particular party with hallucinogenics. In any case, hallucination or parallel reality, we had a child in that story and all my fault that we had lost the one we had in this one and I made sure that we wouldn't have another. "You mean living in a mountain and working for a super top secret anti-alien organization? I'd say there were certain similarities." "Then maybe that is how the story was always suppose to go." Sadly, she studies the dingy, trailer-sized living quarters. "Their accommodations were better." "Sorry, I never saw them. They certainly smelled better." Scully cringed. Trapped in Joseph's maimed body, I had been blind during my time there, a fact she'd forgotten. "You'll have to take my word for it then. It was like living in a mall, a really nice mall with a pool." I put my arm around her. "I don't care about the mall part but if they'd just put in a pool I'd be happy. Something besides the cooling tank, of course." "The point is, their organization was established decades before ours. The 'Hole' will get better, a better place for families." So she had gotten around to that. "And the radiation?" "We have a year of data from the monitors. They did a fantastic job of shielding. We're safer here than if we spent two weeks at Ocean City in mid-summer." Her hand tightened around mine. "Several of us women have been talking. We can set up co-op day care centers, home schooling." "Down here? Where they'll never see the sun." "Someday children will be born between the stars on multi- generational colony ships. I know that you believe that. After meeting Ben and Ness you must. Those children will never see the sun either, or at least not ours." "And what about the longevity of ANY child being brought into the world now! They may have a very short life." "And so you'd deny them even a single hour of happiness of being alive? If dying is the issue than none of us should have been born." "Scully --" "Mulder, I want this. I didn't say so much before when you made your decision to use a condom all the time but I didn't speak in large part because I didn't think it mattered. I had my one miracle and I was afraid to ask for more. But I listened to what Jenny said; they as much as told her that Id been altered in the same way. Mulder, if I read the story right you'll make me pregnant EVERY time we have unprotected sex unless I'm already pregnant." Her eyes were shining in a way that was both maniacal and terrified. "We tried artificial insemination once, it didn't work." "What if they lied to me? What if there was a mix up -- accidental or intentional -- and it wasn't your sperm? What if by fiddling with it and adding this and that preservative they messed it up so that whatever the magical DNA trigger you have for me was blocked or destroyed. It DID work the night after we learned that the A.I. failed, the night we sought comfort in each other." Her hand stole into mine. "The night the barriers finally came down. I guess sometimes the old ways are the best ways." Which had been a night to remember, a night of unfathomable joy and bitter tears, the first time we had ever made love in that way. Unprotected, 'all the way'. "Oh, Scully, do you think that I don't want this too? But I'm still damaged goods. Look at William." "LOOK at William. He's perfect." "He's too perfect." "So we'll find Jeffrey Spender and get more of his magical goo." I didn't know whether to laugh or cry. "So you believe in magic now." "Miracles, magic, call it what you will. I do. It's the world we're living in. And speaking of William, I want to see him. I won't take him from his life but I want us to be part of it." "Aunt Dana and Uncle Fox?" I hissed, bitter sarcasm ripping through me. We had allowed ourselves only a glimpse of our child through a telephoto lens every six months or so for the past two years. "Or Aunt Sara and Uncle Joe. Who cares?" A hundred arguments struggled to the surface but were beaten into silence by this woman who I had never forgotten during all those long months of my exile. The very thought of her had been my light in some very dark places. I answered in the truest way I knew, with my body. "What the hell and damn the torpedoes!" I murmured the words almost lost as my mouth was otherwise occupied. It was Scully who struggled out from the kiss just as things were getting interesting. "Mulder, you don't have to do this. Not now. You donated for Ness and Ben less than two hours ago. Unless you can ...?" "That only served to prime the pump, Tiger." She pulled me up off the floor -- don't ask me how we got there -- with an energy and a strength that never ceased to surprise me. "Then let's go plant a line in a sand for the future. It's not all about fighting." "For the future," I agreed, swinging her up into my arms and heading for the bedroom. "But first, Mulder," she whispered into my ear, "disconnect that surveillance camera." "Good point." The End Author's final notes: I started this series of stories the summer Mulder was abducted. That was what? Three years ago? The intent was to complete them before Mulder returned. Ha! The series ended before that. It was my feelings about the end of the series that are reflected in the last two chapters. This seemed the only opportunity I would ever have to comment on the mess that Chris made of the last two seasons. I needed to explain what I perceived as Mulder's general coldness, his distraction, nearly all the way to the end and also to give myself hope for their continuing story whether there's a movie or not. I will continue to write in a small way but when I do it will be for the Virtual Season crew or back in the early days before season four. I will not return to this time period again except for a short story called 500 Miles that I will post later this week.