From: "Mandy Gerdes" <AGerdes@prodigy.net>
Date: Mon, 13 Mar 2000 00:00:51 -0800
Subject: xfc: NEW: "Pest Control" (1 of 2) by Amanda
Source: xfc

Reply To: "Mandy Gerdes" <AGerdes@prodigy.net>

From: "Mandy Gerdes" <AGerdes@prodigy.net>

TITLE: "Pest Control" (1/2)

AUTHOR: Amanda, Agerdes@prodigy.net

DISTRIBUTION: Anywhere automatic is fine.  In fact, everywhere else is fine
too... just e-mail me with your addy for my records... thanks!

SPOILER WARNING: Nothing really.  Timeline note: This takes place before
"Amor Fati" because, ahem, Diana Fowley is still alive.  (No, read the story
anyway!)

RATING: PG

CLASSIFICATION: H

KEYWORD: none

SUMMARY: Skinner proves his allegiance to Scully in more ways than one....
Short, cute, and NO, it's not S/Sk.  =

*~*~*~*~*~*

 When Skinner called the office and asked to see just me, I wasn't quite
sure what to expect.  He very rarely meets with only fifty-percent of the
X-Files team and when he does, it's usually Mulder because, well, frankly
it's usually Mulder who needs a good ass-kicking from the boss.  Not that
discipline in any form really extorts good behavior from my less than
mainstream partner, but I do admire Skinner's perseverance in trying.
Anyway, this time... he just requested me.

 If the wary expression on Mulder's face is any indication, he isn't
particularly pleased to hear that he wasn't included in the summons.  I
would have attributed it to the fact that nothing good *ever* happens when
we are separated, but given Mulder's propensity for ditching me on a
moment's notice to follow up on a tenuous-at-best and perilous-at-worst
lead, well... I doubt the man has even noticed the pattern.  No doubt he is
thinking of the abdominal bullet scar I sport as a memento of the last time
I assigned to someone else.

 "Want me to pick something up for you from the cafeteria on the way back?"
I ask him, shrugging into my suit jacket which had been discarded earlier as
I foraged through old, musty files.  Mulder had asked me to find a file
about leprechaun activity on the UC Berkeley campus while he typed up a
report.  Why he with the photographic memory didn't go searching for the
file and why I with the hundred-plus words a minute typing speed didn't do
the report, I don't know.  What can I say?  I work with a man who thinks the
National Enquirer is not only a viable but a *valuable* source of
information.

 Suffice it to say that though a meeting with the AD wasn't exactly what I
had in mind in terms of a diversion, it was a welcome departure.  Unless of
course I had missed one of Mulder's gratuitous cereal references in his last
report (just remembering that 'ticks are for kids!' line in the Lyme Disease
case is enough to make me shudder... and God only knows I almost missed the
'magically delicious' one in that hallucinogenic shamrock fiasco) and
Skinner is going to chew me a new, ahem, nostril for it.  It *does* upset me
that Skinner chooses to go after me for Mulder's aberrant sense of humor,
but then again, reprimanding Mulder never seems to have the desired effect.
And Skinner and I both know my tempering effects on the eccentricities that
Mulder seems to thrive on highlighting are the only things that maintain
federal funding for the X-Files division.

 "Not unless the cafeteria has taken to serving something more appetizing
that week-old bologna," Mulder answers.  He shrugs.  "Though I hear Alf
enjoyed a good cat every once in a while."

 I heave a sigh for his benefit.  It is long past the time when Mulder's
day-to-day quirks have truly annoyed me, but I try to keep appearances up,
lest he start to think he can get away with anything.  I mean, this is how
the man acts when he thinks he aggravates me....  I shudder to think what
might change if he knew how well I have acclimated to him.  Instead of
cereal references... my God, we could be looking at 'Mistress Cockburn' and
'X. Stacy' listed as legitimate sources!

 The very possibility makes me wince.

 "I'll be back soon," I tell him, turning to take my leave.

 "Scully!"

 I freeze at his tone, my hand hovering above the doorknob.

 When I turn back, I can't tell if he's leering or genuinely amused.  His
fingers are steepled in front of his lips, so I have no idea if it's a smile
or a smirk that is tugging at his lips, but he slowly trails his gaze from
my eyes to my hemline.

 Since Mulder is not one to openly gawk at me - probably out of the sliver
of self-preservation that he regularly suspends during his escapades - I
realize there's probably something more significant about the gaze than mere
hormonal interest.  Not that there's anything *wrong* with hormonal
interest, mind you, but....

 I glance down and see the source of his entertainment: my black skirt,
apparently victimized by the static cling I had tried to eliminate this
morning before leaving for work, is frozen unnaturally over my rear,
exposing the rather impractical black lace slip I chose this morning simply
because it's the only clean one I have.  I sigh.  Leave it to me to choose
the most impractically feminine slip I own on the one day when static cling
is determined to expose it.

 "Nice slip, Scully," Mulder tells me.  "Is it an expression of your
sublimated femininity?"

 It takes me a minute to realize that he is not actually insulting my
femininity but is instead making a pun.  No doubt he expects me to be
insulted, at which point he would gleefully turn the tables on me and inform
me that he was just talking about a Freudian slip.  He can be so transparent
it's almost embarrassing.

 Then again, I *am* supposed to be letting him think that I am not wise to
his ways.

 "The way you were eyeing my, ahem, *slip*, would indicate that I'm not
doing so well at sublimating it," I toss out at him, rummaging through a
cabinet drawer to find the Bounce sheets I keep there for just such
emergencies.

 "Would that make it a Freudian slip, Scully?" he comments.

 Har har har.  I don't bother even giving him a look because I'm too busy
rubbing the Bounce sheet on the inside of my skirt.

 "What the hell are you doing?"

 I sigh.  "You used the last of my static guard spray as insecticide the
last time the ants got in here," I remind him.  "Dryer sheets work just as
well... you just have to be careful not to do it on the outside of the
fabric because they tend to leave a white residue."

 He smiles at me, this time openly.  "Dana Scully, reduced to
bachelor-tactics."

 I snort, tossing the Bounce sheet away and smoothing my now static-less
skirt down over my slip.  Bachelor tactics indeed.  No heterosexual bachelor
I know even bothers with dryer sheets and Mulder, well, he gets all his
stuff dry-cleaned. *All* his stuff.  He tries to play it off, but I've
picked up his dry-cleaning often enough to know that he sends *all* his
laundry there, machine-washable or no.  I wonder if he knows that whenever I
have his dry-cleaning duty I wash his machine-washables myself?  I doubt he
would notice... besides, I'm going to bring up those 'Fully Functional' Star
Trek boxers when he least expects it.

 "See you in a few, Mulder," I tell him as I leave... and then, thinking
about how embarrassed I would be if Skinner had to point out my exposed
slip, I stick my head back into the office and say, "Thanks!" before
disappearing from his view again.

 I rush to Skinner's office, trying not to appear as if I'm rushing of
course, but Kimberly doesn't even look up from her computer screen as she
says, "Go right in, Agent Scully."

 I take a moment to brush imaginary lint off of my lapel, not even bothering
to ask Kimberly how she knew it was me because honestly, that woman knows a
*whole* hell of a lot more than she lets on, and then stride into Skinner's
office.

 I expect his customary "Have a seat, Agent" or something similar.  Maybe
even a "This won't take long" or an "I'm concerned about-".  But I get none
of those.  Instead, to my shock, Skinner seems ill at ease.  He gestures to
the chair in front of his desk and I sit down wordlessly, too surprised by
his uncharacteristic discomfort to do much else.

 It's quiet.  Too quiet.  Aside from the gentle whoosh of air from the
cushion as it accepts my weight, the spacious office is silent.  I begin to
feel as uncomfortable as Skinner looks.

 "Sir?" I venture cautiously.  "Is there something you wanted to talk to me
about?"

 "No," he says abruptly.

 No?

 My confusion must be evident because Skinner heaves a sigh so sharp that it
very nearly parts my hair... and then he ducks under his desk.

 He... ducked... under his desk?  I can't decide if I want to take his
temperature or call an ambulance.  The ambulance option would appear to be
the better of the two because I have *no* desire to get within arms reach of
Skinner when he is acting this unpredictable.

 And when he emerges from beneath his desk with a wicker basket adorned with
a ludicrously huge red bow, I actually have my cell phone in my hand, ready
to dial for help.  But God help me, I can't remember the number.

 I watch as he hastily rips off the bow, throwing its remnants somewhere on
his floor perhaps in the hopes that I hadn't noticed it, and then dumps the
basket unceremoniously on my lap.  I am so occupied staring at Skinner
open-mouthed that it doesn't even occur to me to open the stupid basket.

 And then... it moves.

 I swear to God I jump a foot in the air and Skinner launches himself over
his desk to catch the basket before it tumbles to the ground.  "For
godsakes, Scully, be careful," he mutters as I rearrange myself in the chair
and gingerly accept the basket back.

 I hold the basket by the top of its arched handle and note that it's weight
distribution is all wrong.  There is one cluster of mass in the basket and
its centered on the right hand side.  And then... oh Lord, the mass moves to
the left-hand side of the basket.  I glance up at Skinner, but he is
studiously avoiding my eyes, shuffling papers aimlessly around his desk.

 I consider just thrusting the basket back at him, but curiosity gets the
better of me.  I peek inside.

 Oh.  My.  God.

 Assistant Director of the FBI Walter Sergei Skinner, infamous throughout
the Bureau for his hard-assed approach to order and even harder pecs - I
mean, policies... he....

 Lord, he gave me a kitten.

 There are some things that can render even me speechless.  That flukeman
business... that did a pretty good number on my vocal capabilities. Most of
Mulder's theories take me a moment to digest for the sheer fact that they
operate on principles and ideas that simply don't exist in my reality.  It
just takes me a few seconds to shift between realities.

 But Skinner presenting me with a kitten in a wicker basket.... That has
*got* to take the cake.  And I'd laugh at the sheer absurdity of it all if I
could only remember how to laugh.

 "Purebred ragdoll, fully vaccinated, breed authentication papers in the
basket," Skinner says, still shuffling papers around.

 I'm still staring dumfounded at the clumsy ball of fur as it wanders around
the basket, tripping over its own feet and snagging a tuft of its long fur
between the woven fibers of the basket.

 Little pointy ears... check.

 Soft, padded little paws... check.

 Fluffy little tail... check.

 Cute little whiskers... check.

 Adorable blue eyes... check.

 I think I can say with one-hundred percent accuracy that I am definitely
looking at a kitten here.

 "That will be all, Agent Scully," Skinner says.

 Wha-?  Oh, no no no.

 "Sir, I, umm," I start to say, still staring at the fluffy ball.  I try
again.  "Sir, this is... this is a kitten."

 "Excellent observational skills, Agent," is all Skinner says.

 I finally tear my eyes away from the kitten to stare at my boss.  "Sir, you
gave me a kitten," I say.  It's a good thing I have tenure because a junior
field agent engaging in this kind of inane conversation with an AD would be
on the first plane to Alaska.

 Skinner takes off his glasses and looks at me.  "Yes, Agent Scully, I gave
you a kitten.  I expect you'll give her a good home.  That will be all."

 He's going to dismiss me without telling me why the hell he gave me a
kitten?  He wouldn't do that, would he?

 Apparently he would, could, and has because he has gone back to flipping
through papers, summarily dismissing me from his thoughts.

 I start to ask what possessed him to give me a kitten, but said kitten has
somehow managed to crawl out of the basket and is now snagging my expensive
black skirt in its attempt to knead my lap into a proper bed.  I watch it
for a moment, alternately mourning the skirt and inwardly cooing over the
kitten's antics.  But then I realize what the hell has just happened and I
ask, "Why sir?"

 "Pest control, Agent Scully," Skinner replies succinctly.  "Cats are
excellent for pest control.  Now if you will excuse me, I have work to do."

 Pest control? I wonder silently, but obediently start to take my leave.
The kitten immediately tumbles off the side of my lap as I move and mews
indignantly.  Skinner once again launches himself over his desk, stopping
only when he realizes that I caught the wayward animal and that it seems
perfectly content to purr happily in my grasp.

 He clears his throat and settles back down into his chair, looking back at
his papers.

 Who knew he was such a sucker for kittens?

 The kitten tries valiantly to avoid being forced back into the basket, but
I am smarter and more stubborn than it is, and there is no way in hell I'm
going to walk all the way back to the basement with a kitten in hand.

 "Uh.  Thank you, sir," I say awkwardly, as I stand and take care not to
jostle the basket much.

 I'm almost out of the door when Skinner calls out, "Take her straight home
and allow her free reign of your apartment."

 *What?*

 I start to turn around, but Skinner waylays me.  "Just do it, Agent
Scully."

 Yes sir, Assistant Director, sir.

 It takes a lot to surprise Kimberly; working with Skinner every day, I can
only imagine.  But I can feel the secretary's open-mouthed stare on my back
as I carry a meowing basket out of the office foyer.

 In fact, her stare felt a lot like all the ones I'm now getting from the
bullpen.

 I finally make it to the elevator, but, as luck should have it, there are
two office couriers already in the compartment.  I press the "B" and stand
there, staring straight ahead as if I can't hear the forlorn mewling coming
from my basket or see the worried looks that pass between the couriers.

 They both get off the elevator at the second floor, one of them glancing
askance over her shoulder, and as soon as the doors glide shut behind them,
I peek inside the basket.  Yup, still a kitten.

 When I walk into the basement office, Mulder pretends not to see me at
first.  It's a ritual of his, particularly when I've been called away
without him.  Something about not noticing that I'm back means that he
didn't notice I was gone which means that he didn't care that he wasn't part
of the summons.  But a tiny, woebegone meow from the basket is all it takes
for his head to shoot up, an expression of astonishment on his face.

 "I wasn't really serious about the cat, Scully, but the least you could
have done was bring some mayonnaise."

 I ignore his comment, though I do note that he seemed to take it in better
stride than I did, and carefully place the basket on Mulder's desk.  Mulder
peeks inside the basket and asks, "Did the stork leave this on my doorstep?"

 "No, Skinner left it on mine," I say.

 Mulder looks up and I note smugly that his calm acceptance of the situation
is nowhere to be seen now that he knows Skinner is behind it.  "I,
uhhhh...." he begins, then pauses, perusing the kitten with more interest
now.  "She has your eyes," he says finally.

 I sigh theatrically and pull the squirming kitten out of the basket and
plop it down in Mulder's lap.  Mulder stares at it as if it were a
shapeshifter and tries to get his tie out of harm's way, but the kitten gets
to the silk first.  He watches as it bats the cloth around.

 "Why the hell did Skinner give you a kitten, Scully?" he asks, staring
comically down at his lap.  If I didn't know there was a kitten down there,
the look on his face as well as the flopping tie would make for a great
misunderstanding.

 "Damned if I know," I answer honestly.  "He said something about pest
control and then gave me strict instructions to take it home straight away
and let it roam free around my apartment."

 "Argh!" is all Mulder says.  The kitten has apparently switched tactics
from Play with the tie to Kill the tie.  "Dammit," he mutters, carefully
extricating the animal from his clothing and firmly depositing it in my
hands.  He then brushes his slacks off and regains his seat.  "What are you
going to name her?" he inquires, watching me as I struggle to put the kitten
back in the basket.  "Skinner?"

 I shoot him a glare.  "Mulder, you know fully well that I cannot maintain a
pet," I say.  "With all the time that I'm out of town, with the hours that I
keep... I certainly cannot give this creature a good home."  I finally get
the kitten situated inside the basket and I grab my purse.  "As soon as I
can find a good home for it, it's outta here."

 "You might want to reconsider, Scully," Mulder says thoughtfully.  "I don't
think Skinner is your normal kitten-giving kind of guy.  He must have had a
reason."

 I sigh again.  "I'll be back after I take this home," I tell him and shut
the door behind me.

 "She's awfully cute, Scully!" Mulder calls after me.

 Pest control indeed.

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

end (1/2)

Reply To: "Mandy Gerdes" <AGerdes@prodigy.net>

From: "Mandy Gerdes" <AGerdes@prodigy.net>

TITLE:  "Pest Control"  (2/2)

AUTHOR:  Amanda, AGerdes@prodigy.net

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

 At around nine that night, when I actually make it back home, my apartment
is in shambles.  That wretched beast has ransacked the place.  How such a
small animal could possibly do this amount of damage, I have no idea.  I
pick up a couch cushion - a very expensive couch cushion, I might add - that
has apparently been hunted down, killed, and disemboweled by a small, very
determined little predator.

 Grumbling about the long-haired little menace and the impracticality of
someone like me having such a high-maintenance pet, I stalk around my living
room, noting the evidence of the tiny fiend's crusade: the eviscerated
carcass of another couch cushion; the tattered hem of my curtains; the
crocheted afghan covered in an incriminating mat of long cream-colored
hairs; and a series of ornate etchings in the legs of my coffee table that
would make a caveman proud.

 "Here kitty kitty kitty," I say darkly.

 The silly creature actually comes, trotting proudly out of my bedroom with
something white stuck to its whiskers.  I scoop the kitten up and realize
that the 'something white' is actually down.  Down?!  "You ate one of my
pillows!"

 The beast doesn't seem the least bit remorseful and actually has the gall
to settle down in the crook of my arm and start to purr.  "Pest control
indeed," I mutter.  I carry the small parcel into my bedroom and am not
surprised to see my favorite down pillow gutted and strewn across the bed.
What *does* surprise me is how the little monster managed to actually get on
top of my bed.  With a sigh, I deposit the animal on the biggest clump of
down in the hopes that it will tear up the last remaining chunk of that
pillow rather than go into the closet and ransack my tailored suits.

 "You'd better not rip anything else up while I'm taking my bath or I'll
slather you with mayonnaise and give you to Mulder," I grumble at the now
occupied kitten.  It doesn't seem particularly offended by my threat and
when I realize that I am threatening an animal, I go into the bathroom and
start a bath.

 I add a few bath beads to the water, a few crystals, and a generous helping
of bubbles and just as the scent of lavender starts to fill the room, I
sneak back to the door of my bedroom and glance in.  The kitten is on its
back, wrestling with a scrap of a pillowcase.  It would appear that the
pillowcase is winning.  Satisfied that the kitten is pleasantly occupied, I
return to the bathroom, depositing my gun and holster on the dresser as I
go.

 As I sink into the deliciously sinful hot water, I can almost forget that
I'm going to have to entirely refurnish my living room.... Thoughts of kitty
litter, hairballs, and my landlord's heart palpitations slowly ebb from my
mind as the luxurious water laps at my skin and the lavender-scented steam
soothes away my burgeoning headache.

 That is, of course, until I hear a muffled thump.  It could be the
neighbors... or a car door down the street.  But somehow, I have a sneaking
suspicion that the infuriating little feline is behind it and there is no
way in hell that beast is going to get to my suits.  I can live with
disemboweled cushions and tattered curtains, but *not* without my suits.

 And so I lift myself out of the tub, mourning the loss of the water's
hypnotic warmth, and wrap myself in a huge fluffy white towel.  Dealing with
a long-haired kitten in a white, damp towel is probably not the brightest
idea in terms of hair control, but I don't bother finding something else.
God only knows that I'll have to go to work in this towel if that kitten
manages to get into my closet.

 And wouldn't that just be swell?  I step out of the bathroom and into my
bedroom.  If Skinner *wants* to see me in just a towel, the man could just
ask.  No sense in giving me a clothing-eating -

 And then I hear it.

 A sneeze.

 Not a tiny kitten one.  This was a real sneeze.  From someone far bigger
than that cat, someone probably bigger than me, someone who had tried to
stifle the exclamation but had not entirely succeeded.

 I slowly extend my hand to the dresser where I left my gun, straining to
hear another telltale sound with which I can gauge the intruder's position.
I now have my gun securely in my hands, but still have no idea where the
sneeze came from.

 I cautiously look over my shoulder, back towards the living room... and
apparently the intruder was waiting for this because I feel an explosive
impact knocking the gun from my hands and an arm starting to snake around my
neck.

 And then he sneezes again.

 To be honest, I've never considered an enemy's sneeze a tactical advantage
but I don't ponder it now.  I jab my elbow into his stomach and as he
doubles over I lunge for my gun.  I whirl around, gun in my hand, and shout,
"Freeze!"

 He doesn't.  Do they ever?

 And so I shoot him.  And as his arm goes sailing off with nary a splatter
of blood, I finally realize that this is Krycek and I'm tempted to shoot him
just for the sport of it.  "What the hell do you want, Krycek?" I demand
coldly.

 He sneezes again unceremoniously.  "When did you get the cat, Scully?" he
just asks conversationally.

 And this is the point, of course, where Mulder knocks loudly on the door,
shattering my concentration, Krycek kicks the gun out of my hands *again*
and then dives through my window... and then Mulder shouts my name, kicks my
front door in, and runs into my bedroom with his gun drawn.

 I glance halfheartedly down at the street.  I know that not only did Krycek
somehow manage to survive the fall, but he's already long gone.  I sigh,
glancing despondently at the shattered window and knowing that my front door
probably doesn't look much better.

 "What the hell happened, Scully?" Mulder demands, looking wildly around my
room as if he expects someone to jump out at him.

 I clutch the edges of my towel around me and then lean down, pick up the
prosthetic arm my visitor misplaced, and dust it off.  "Did you know that
Krycek is allergic to cats, Mulder?" is all I say.

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

 "What can I do for you, Agent Scully?"

 Skinner still hasn't looked up at me.  I dump the prosthetic arm on his
desk casually and at this his head jerks up, a question in his eyes.

 "You could have just told me They were going to assassinate me," I say, my
arms folded over my chest.

 Skinner turns his attention back to the file spread out over his desk.  "I
don't know what you're talking about, Agent."

 I nod.  Had I really expected anything else?  "Thank you for the kitten,
sir," I say instead.  "She has already demonstrated her worth in
controlling... pests."

 He acknowledges me with a slight nod of his head.

 Just as I turn to leave, he says, "I hear Agent Fowley is allergic to cats
too."

 Was that a hint of a smile in his voice?

 I can't be sure because a wicked, wicked thought has entered my mind.

 Pest control... indeed.

*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

Thanks for reading!
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

MG

"If you have a peg leg or hooks for hands, you know, maybe it's enough
to simply carry on living.  You know, bravely facing life with your
disability, it's heroic just to survive.  But without these things you're
actually expected to make something of your life, achieve something,
earn a raise, wear a necktie..."
--- Mulder, on the story of my life.

"I have a tendency to wear my mind on my sleeve.  I have a history of taking
off my shirt."
--- The Barenaked Ladies on the OTHER story of my life

