From: ephemeral@ephemeralfic.org
Date: 16 Feb 2004 16:54:49 -0000
Subject: Passion Fruit by Lynn Saunders
Source: direct

Reply To: lynnsaundersfanfic@hotmail.com


Title: Passion Fruit
Author: Lynn Saunders
Rating: R
Classification: MSR, RST, Post-Ep for both Amor Fati 
and Millennium
Spoilers: through Millennium
Summary: There is no place she'd rather be.
Feedback: Adored, re-read, printed out, and imortalized 
in a quality binder at lynnsaundersfanfic@hotmail.com.
Website: http://www.mindspring.com/~lynnsaunders
Distribution: Archive freely, but please drop me a line 
to let me know.
Date Completed: 2.16.2004

Dedication: To my BTS babies for the Readers' Day 
Challenge (element list at end). I love you all!

Special Thanks: To Carol and Sallie, my beloved beta 
team.

Disclaimer: Oops, not mine. Sorry.

			- - -

Passion Fruit
by Lynn Saunders


		== Late October, 1999 ==


"I saw things, Scully." He raises her hand shakily, 
placing it on the shorn hair at his temple. "In my mind."

Concerned, she eases him back against the hospital  
pillow. "It's alright. Try to get some rest."

"I heard things, too." He blinks at her groggily. 
"I could hear you."

A week later, standing in his doorway, she realizes 
what he means and wonders what he might have 
discovered in her.

			  - - -

He does not exaggerate his feelings for her. She is his 
constant. The only memories he is certain are real and true 
involve her. 

Her fingers caress his face, lingering on his full bottom 
lip, a heavenly sensation. He should kiss her, but he 
hesitates, and the moment is gone. Even as she turns to 
leave, he is at peace.

In the evening, he is surprised to find her at his door 
once again, pizza box in hand. This is a rare occasion, 
to be sure.

They pretend to watch the news, watching each other 
instead. She laughs at three of his bad jokes, and he 
steals her pepperoni. They find "When Harry Met Sally" 
on AMC and settle in for the long haul. Halfway through, 
Scully rests her head on his shoulder. His arms encircle 
her easily, as if it is nothing new.

"I was lost without you," she says. 

He takes his first deep breath in ages. 


		== November, 1999 ==


It's the little things that remind her she's hopelessly, 
completely in love with him. The way he smiles 
conspiratorially while sharing his insane theories and steals 
sips of her coffee when he knows she's looking. The way 
he touches her, warm fingers against the curve of her back 
offering up a challenge she desperately wants to accept.
Ignoring his silent advances has proven to be the worst 
form of self-neglect, so she plays with his tie and 
buys suits with a slightly lower neckline, hoping to 
atone for lost time.

So much time has passed since her last relationship that 
she can barely remember the feel of it, of being high on 
love. She knows she once enjoyed the novelty of having a 
man to touch and kiss anytime, anyplace, simply because 
she wanted to. The idea is wonderful, but her memories 
are scattered and fuzzy, hard to piece together, as 
if they are parts of a dream or a past life.

She thinks about the men she has been involved with, 
wondering about the life she would have led if she had 
chosen to spend it with one of them. She shivers, thinking 
that she might have ended up in a stereotypical role, the 
younger woman, the home-wrecker. She hopes she walked away 
in time.

After Daniel, she slept on her sofa for six weeks. 

After Diana, Mulder slept on his couch for six years. 

Mulder is different, but she fits well with him. 
They are more alike than anyone suspects. Maybe 
they could work out the details as they go along.

			- - -

Another car, another long drive home. They stop at a 
roadside diner because he wants french fries. "Greasy," 
he says. "The real thing."

The booth is small with bright red vinyl seats and a 
yellow checked table cloth. The salt and pepper shakers 
are tiny Holstein cows. Their drinks are served in large 
mason jars. 

He makes fun of her for ordering water while he eats 
his fries three at a time. "Live a little, Scully."

She selects chocolate cake from the menu and eats it 
slowly in retaliation. He watches her, shaking his 
head, and gets his hand slapped when he tries to steal 
a forkful.

They enjoy a few minutes of companionable silence.

"What are you thinking?" she asks softly.

"I'm thinking... this is nice." 

She looks around the small room. The palm tree 
wallpaper is peeling, and the gum-smacking teenage 
waitress is chatting with her boyfriend on the phone. 
The shake machine buzzes loudly for no apparent reason. 
Then, there's Mulder. He is slouched across from her, 
sleeves rolled and tie loosened. A good sixteen hours 
have passed since his morning shower and shave. His 
hair is rumpled, and his eyes are warm. 

"It is," she agrees. There is no place she'd rather be.

			- - -

Waiting for information in the Gunmen's lair is not 
an easy thing. Mulder has trouble sitting still, knowing 
he's surrounded by so many very expensive toys just 
waiting for a test drive. 

The printer across the room is churning out page 327 of 
1608, and it looks like he'll be here for awhile. He 
gets bored reading about the latest in android technology, 
so he turns to Frohike's computer for amusement. 

The hard drive is full of folders with obscure names like 
'lexeme' and 'toric.' Most are full of articles and 
reports. A few contain rough drafts of recently published 
conspiracy theories. He clicks through several, but 
nothing captures his attention. Finally, he selects a 
folder labeled 'recon' and almost chokes on his 
coffee when he sees that all of the file names begin 
with the same six letters. All are photos, some close up, 
some far away. There are a few random snapshots, but 
most are crime scene pictures. And each is an image of 
Scully.

"Damn it, Mulder. I can't leave you alone for one 
minute."

Frohike's voice startles him, but he regains his 
composure admirably. "What are these all about?"

"She's hot." Noting the way his friend bristles, 
Frohike is quick to amend. "Relax, big guy. We're 
not stalking Scully. We just happened to intercept 
a few files."

"But there are over 20 pictures here. It must've 
taken awhile to find these... accidentally," Mulder 
chides, adding air quotes to the last word for 
emphasis. 

"Not really. It's a Lone Gunmen special ops mission. 
As I told the guys, we're collecting 'em for you."

Mulder looks genuinely confused. "Why?"

Frohike clicks on the first icon, and the picture 
unfolds. Scully crouches beside a victim but is 
looking up at something outside of the frame. "We 
wanted to give you concrete evidence. This is the 
way she looks at you, even when you're arguing 
over a stiff." He pauses for effect. "So do 
something about it, already."
 
			
		== December, 1999 ==


Her heels pound on the wet pavement, a sickening slapping 
sound. The Kevlar weighs her down as she sprints through 
the darkness. 

Two shots ring out, then a third. She imagines she hears 
a body crumpling to the ground, but that is impossible. 
She is too far away. She's always too far away.

She whips around the corner into a narrow alley. It smells 
of piss and old newspapers. She tastes blood on her tongue, 
for she has bitten into it. At the far end of the alley, 
she sees him, sprawled on the pavement, lit by a single 
flickering street lamp. His arm is slung across his neck 
at an odd angle, broken, the white of his dress shirt 
sleeve contrasting the bloom of crimson at his temple. 
His eyes are open, staring up into the starless sky, 
unseeing.

She tries to run to him, but she seems fixed in place. 
Suddenly, a team of agents materializes and swarms 
into the alley, led by a tall, thin figure. Fowley, 
she realizes, emotions swirling. The other woman 
touches Mulder, brushes his hair away from his forehead 
and kisses him tenderly. Sudden rage gives Scully the 
power to move forward, and she rushes to his side. 

Fowley rises to meet her. "The situation is under 
control, Agent Scully."

"I need to see him."

"But you aren't what he needs anymore." 

Scully notices for the first time the simple gold 
band on Mulder's ring finger. Realization dawns, 
twisting her inside out. Speechless, she stares 
as his wedding ring gleams rhythmically in the 
flickering lamplight.

She awakens, startled, hot tears streaming down her 
cheeks. She licks them from the corner of her 
mouth, salty like the blood in her dream. Her racing 
heart slows, yet the feeling of stomach-dropping 
fear remains.

Irritated, she slides out of bed and wanders to the 
kitchen. She fills the tea pot and puts it on to heat, 
her mind racing. She wants to reach out to him, 
call him, touch him. She wants to crawl into bed 
with him and sleep a thousand years, curled around 
his strong body that radiates heat and energy and 
smells like home.

She is finally tired of being alone, she decides 
as she sips her cup of chamomile in her too-quiet 
apartment. 

Missy told her once that everyone forms at least one 
unbreakable attachment in their lifetime. Each person 
has someone that they would do anything for. Mulder is 
her unbreakable attachment. She will open her door to 
him at any time, under any circumstance, after any 
amount of separation, no questions asked. Always.

She feels ridiculous, being jealous of a dead woman, yet 
her darkest fear is that Diana held this special place 
in Mulder's heart. The hurts of the past year still sting 
from time to time. 

She wants answers badly, the way she wants him.

She has to get out of the house, so she pulls on a pair 
of worn jeans and the black sweater she wore to work 
before slinging on her trench coat, snatching up her car 
keys, and locking the door behind her. She returns briefly 
to retrieve her badge and gun, wondering how she became 
so paranoid that she doesn't leave the house without them 
anymore.

			  - - -	

Each week, she has shown up at his door baring some 
sort of offering. First the pizza, then a CD, ice cream 
and chocolate sauce, a bag of sunflower seeds, cookies 
straight from her mother's oven, a stuffed goldfish that 
'reminded her of him.' Yesterday, she brought an anthology 
of Norse folk tales, which he read aloud to her because he 
knows she likes to watch. 

He isn't sure why he expects her again tonight, but he 
is surprised when her knock still hasn't sounded at a 
quarter to eleven. Resigned, he pads barefoot to the door, 
checking the peephole and throwing the deadbolt. 

			  - - -	

Lost in her thoughts, she wanders the neat aisles of a 
corner market, wondering about the other people who are 
out at this hour.

When she sees the ripe, red display, gleaming under 
the fluorescent grocery store lights, she knows what 
she is supposed to do. She's not sure if she believes 
in fate, but the fruit calls out to her. She selects 
several fat apples from the bottom of the pile and 
makes her way to the front of the store, where the 
bored clerk regards her strangely. She suspects not many 
people venture out on a gloomy winter night just to buy 
an armful of fruit, but the clumsy weight of the crinkled 
paper bag is comforting to her hyperactive fingers as she 
walks down the street to her car. 

She needn't worry that he'll be asleep, she tells 
herself as she maneuvers through the darkened streets. 
He is always ready for her.

At her knock, he opens the door with an amused expression, 
but says nothing as she walks in under his arm and makes her 
way to his kitchen. 

She might be crazy enough to eat apples with him at one 
o'clock in the morning, but she isn't so crazy that she 
doesn't wash them first. She admires the way Mulder's 
now-prominent crow's feet crinkle as he smiles, his 
long fingers playing tag with hers in the warm water.

			  - - -	

"Tell me a story, Mulder." 

Four shiny red apples sit before them, lined up with 
military precision on the coffee table. She selects 
the largest and offers it to him.

"From our book?" He smiles, remembering her eyes on 
him the night before. 

"No, just... tell me. Tell me anything."

He turns the apple over in his hands thoughtfully, his 
thumb caressing the planes and curves. It really is 
beautiful, when he thinks about it.

"In many cultures," he begins, picking up the small 
paring knife she brought from the kitchen, "the apple 
is an erotic symbol."

She raises an eyebrow, but says nothing, watching him 
peel the apple instead. The sharp blade slices easily 
through the plump fruit, a crisp, wet sound. He carefully 
avoids her gaze.

"There is evidence that the tradition of throwing rice 
at weddings evolved from an ancient custom in which 
apples were thrown near new brides to ignite sexual 
desire and promote fertility."

He cuts a slice of the apple and offers it to her, 
balanced between his thumb and the flat of the knife. 
The fruit feels sticky in his fingers. 

"The newlyweds might also share an apple in celebration 
of their union. As a gift, an apple represented the 
giver's eagerness to begin a romantic relationship."

She looks at him quizzically, accepting the fruit and 
watching as he slices a section for himself. The room 
is too quiet, so she turns to their old stand-by, the 
innuendo-laced one-liner. She's getting better and 
better at dishing them out. 

"Are you propositioning me?"

He looks directly into her eyes for the first time 
since he began the history lesson. 'The question is,' 
his expression seems to say, 'are you?'

She doesn't have an answer to that.


		== Christmas, 1999 ==


Late in the evening, her cell phone chirps from her 
mother's kitchen table. Matthew, who had been happily 
playing with his peanut butter and jelly snack, 
squeals in delight and reaches with sticky fingers 
for the prize. He captures it easily, pressing several 
of the buttons and shouting "hewoo" before Scully 
can wrestle the phone away. 

"Scully," she answers with a laugh, distracting the pouting 
toddler with her keys.

"Taking hostages, I see."

She watches her peanut butter-covered nephew shake the 
keys gleefully and toss them to the floor. "Actually, 
I think it might be the other way around. I'm on baby
sitting detail. We're having PB&J."

"Scully, I'm shocked that you would give a child sugar 
at this hour."

She smiles to herself, bending to pick up the keys. 
"Yes, well, he'll be coming down from the high on Tara 
and Bill's shift. I've still got wrapping to do."

"Ah." He pauses. "So... I have a surprise for you."

"Mulder, if this is about a haunted house, I'm hanging 
up now."

This earns her a chuckle. "No, not at all. It should 
be arriving... now." The doorbell sounds right on cue. 
"Now, Miss Scully, what do we have behind door number 
one?"

"Am I sure I want to find out?" she asks, hoisting 
Matthew into her arms and making her way to the door. 

"I promise it's completely safe to look. I'll give you 
a call in the morning. Merry Christmas, Scully."

She can hear his smile. "Merry Christmas." 

She opens the door to find a small, neat basket at her 
feet. Tucked inside the cloth covering are several 
ripe, red apples and a small card that reads, "Just 
returning the sentiment." 

			- - -

He watches his fish dart to and fro in their liquid 
world. The large one pauses to look at him through the 
sealed glass before moving on to gulp several of the 
brightly colored flakes floating all around. He really 
should feed them on a more regular schedule. 

He wonders what the fish think of him. Do they view him 
as some sort of benevolent deity that bestows gifts of 
food and clean water at random? 

He thinks about basketball at the rec center, the fried 
chicken he ate for dinner, and cold case files. But, 
mostly he thinks about Scully. Is she curled up in front 
of her mother's colorful Christmas tree, slicing an apple 
and thinking of him?

He longs for a holiday he can spend with her. They get 
so little down time together. He'll take her out for 
her birthday, he promises himself. It's a shame Mardi 
Gras won't be in February this year. He imagines them 
driving down to New Orleans in one of the convertibles 
Scully loves to rent, joining the mass of couples 
picnicking on colorful woven blankets, Scully toying 
with her bright green beads and sipping a margarita. 
The air would swirl around them, smelling of tequila 
and expensive cigars, and they would be free.

			- - -

By the time the rest of the family returns from their 
last-minute shopping trip, Matthew has passed out on the 
sofa. Tara carefully scoops him up and carries him 
upstairs to bed. In the kitchen, Scully quickly wraps 
a few stray presents and helps her mother put away 
the groceries. Maggie pauses when she sees the basket 
of apples. 

"Mulder sent them," Scully explains. "Do you think there's 
enough for a pie?"

Bill eyes the gift, then turns to his sister. "He sent 
*apples*?"

Scully simply nods. She can't tell Bill it's quite 
possibly the most exciting gift she has ever received. 
Actually, the present seems downright naughty, when 
she thinks about it.

She changes into her pajamas and brushes her teeth, 
thinking about him. In her room, she removes the note 
from its hiding place in the side pocket of her bag. 

Just returning the sentiment. Oh, God.

Deep in the night, she dreams of making love to Mulder 
in the bedroom of her tiny college apartment. It is 
mid-summer and the overhead fan is on, cooling their 
sweat-slick bodies. They rise and fall in her old 
twin bed with no headboard and risers underneath, his 
t-shirt muting the light from the bedside lamp. The 
dream is all sensation, full-color, and she awakens 
before dawn, breathless and trembling.

			 - - -

He does indeed call in the morning. "Watch the sunrise 
with me," he says.

Carefully, she creeps down the stairs and out onto 
her mother's porch. It's freezing, and she snuggles into 
the quilt wrapped around her shoulders, careful not to drop 
the phone. In the east, the sky is ablaze, the rising sun 
sending explosions of red and orange out to greet her. 

"It's going to be a gorgeous day."

"Mmm," he agrees. "Have you gotten any interesting 
presents yet?"

She laughs. "A few. Mulder, who in the world delivered 
apples for you on Christmas Eve?"

"Santa, of course."

"Mulder."

"What? It was an important gift. I had to make sure it 
was delivered in style." 

Together, they watch as the sun slips over the horizon 
and the world around them wakes.

"What are you thinking?"

She watches her breath puff in the cold morning air, 
considering her answer. "I'm wondering what happens next, 
for us."

"So am I."


		== January, 2000 ==


"Easy does it, Mulder," she warns, taking his bag 
away from him and slinging it over her shoulder. 
"I'm your personal bellhop until you're all patched 
up."

He sighs and nods, but insists on pushing the elevator 
button with his good hand. "What about turndown service?"

She eyes his reflection in the metal doors. "Don't push 
your luck." 

The elevator opens with a ding, and they trudge inside 
looking every bit as tired as they are. Scully leans 
against the back wall, eyes closed. She briefly 
considers the possibility of making out with Mulder in 
the elevator, pushing him back into a corner and taking 
her time. Yet when she opens her eyes she remembers 
the sling on his arm and his slight limp. Not a good 
idea.

Her lips still tingle. For a first kiss, it wasn't 
that bad. But, it wasn't quite what she imagined a 
first kiss with Mulder would be. It was sweet and 
gentle. She was hoping for something more... 
substantial. Still, progress is progress.

At his door, she fishes the keys out of his back 
pocket, enjoying it way too much for her own good. 
She coaxes his creaky door open and drops his bag 
into the closest chair. He eases onto the couch 
and turns on the television. Sci-Fi is running a 
'Twilight Zone' marathon. 

She hesitates in the living room doorway, unsure 
of what to do. "Do you need anything?"

He smiles. "Nah, I'll be okay. I promise to keep 
the sling on as long as I can stand it."

"You know what I like." She drops his keys onto the 
coffee table and turns to go. 

"Hey," he says, holding out his hand as she turns 
to face him. "Come over here."

Warily, she approaches the couch and sits beside 
him. "Mulder, you need to get some rest."

"I will, I will." He pauses. "Just sit with me 
for awhile." 

She cannot refuse this man, with his heavy-lidded 
gaze and slightly stubbled jaw. So, she stays.

			- - -

He awakens in the night, sprawled on his leather couch, 
Scully snuggled under his good arm, cheek against his 
chest. Her features glow, flashing eerily in the light of 
the television. He reaches for the remote and presses the 
power button, plunging the apartment into darkness. 
Gently, he kisses her forehead and pulls his Navajo 
blanket down around them to block out the chill. 

He refuses to send her home. He hopes, just maybe, she's 
already there.

			- - -

It happens, unexpectedly, on a Wednesday. She is at 
his door at seven o'clock as promised, but they never 
make it to dinner. He brushes flakes of snow from her 
shoulders, she looks at him in just the right way, and 
they are done for. 

He marks her neck with his lips as she rises above him, 
panting with the thrill of it. Her nipples brush against 
his bare chest rhythmically. She licks her lips, her 
nerves running hot and cold. What this man does to her 
defies belief, but it isn't a dream. It is real and 
wet and so, so perfect.

			- - -

Today, they make time to eat lunch together. She 
saves their window seats in a bustling deli while he 
braves the line for sandwiches. 

Outside, a helium balloon bounces precariously in 
the grasp of its young owner. The wind is strong, 
the boy isn't paying attention, and Scully knows 
what is going to happen. 

Oblivious to the drama unfolding across the street, 
Mulder makes his way through the lunch-hour crowd 
with their food.

"Heads up," he warns. 

She catches the apple easily, smiling at him. Lately, 
there have been apples everywhere. He leaves them for 
her, inconspicuous reminders on her bedside table, 
in her car, on his desk at work. Two days ago, she 
found apple Jolly Ranchers in her lingerie drawer. 

She can't tell him to stop or let him know that it 
ruffles her feathers ever so slightly. After all 
these years, she secretly enjoys being stirred up.
She has smiled more in the past week than any other 
time he can remember. He catches her staring again, 
but these days she doesn't have to pretend he's 
imagining things. 

The vendor on the street corner is pushing newspapers. 
Cars stop and go with the changing street light. The 
boy's balloon slips away and up into the sky, becoming
a tiny green dot before disappearing altogether. All 
around, the world is rushing by, yet they take a 
moment to sit too close together in the small deli, 
quietly discussing case notes. More now than ever 
before, there is no place she'd rather be.

			== end ==

BTS Readers' Day Challenge Elements:
1. bed risers - check
2. Mardi Gras - check
3. Sallie's "That" - check
4. Frohike with a folder of Scully candids he has 
to explain - check
5. A helium balloon - check

Yea, all of them! I had a great time.
