*****

Queen's Gambit 9/15 
See part 1 for disclaimer, etc. 

***** 

Monday, October 12 
Ontario Mine, 1500 foot level 
11:47 a.m. 

"Does anyone have any questions?" 

Mrs. McKeeley's sixth grade class shuffled their feet but no one
raised their hand. At the back of the group two boys poked each
other. 

"Ask him," one of them whispered. 

"No - you!" the other returned. 

"You said you would," the first boy fumed. 

The guide motioned for everyone to come towards him. "All right
then, if you'll all follow me we'll work our way over to the #2
shaft room." 

"Hey," the second boy grew bold. "My dad says the police were here
all day yesterday. And I saw lots of cop cars in the parking lot.
What's that about?" 

"Ummm," the guide thought for a moment. He hadn't been here
yesterday but he'd heard all about the excitement. "They're
searching for a missing person. So as long as everyone sticks with
the group, we won't have to send them looking for you. Okay,
everybody follow me." 

"Cool!" the first boy exclaimed. A murmur went up from the class as
they followed the guide into another corridor. 

"Here at the Ontario we have surveyed as deep as 3200 feet. There's
still plenty of silver left in this mountain but the current price
of silver is less than the cost of pumping the water out." There
was the distant sound of running water up ahead. "This part of the
mine yielded a huge payload of silver - until the day they hit an
underground river." 

The group came into a small chamber. Three tunnels connected to it;
the one at the far end was dammed up. Water spilled over the top of
the three-foot high gate into a large drainage pipe. "So now the
only thing we mine here at the Ontario is water. We have to pump
the water on this level or else we lose all the equipment housed
here, including the machinery for shaft #1, which we rode down to
get here. We sell the water to some of the resorts here in Park
City. That works out well for us - we sell them water, they make
snow, the snow melts and next year we sell them the water again." 

Only Mrs. McKeeley gave an appreciative guffaw. The guide sighed to
himself. He really needed to find another job, one with a little
action. 

"Any questions?" he asked. 

The children all stared back with bored expressions. 

"Okay, let's all walk this way and we'll take a look at the #2
shaft room. It's not an true shaft since it doesn't go all the way
to the surface but..." 

"Hey mister!" The boy who had asked about the police was pointing
down the flooded shaft. "I think there's something back there." 

***** 

Monday, October 12 
Daly West Mine, 1500 foot level 
12:31 p.m. 

Scully was a few paces behind Mulder when she felt the air stir
behind her. She whirled around, training her flashlight on...
nothing. 

Mulder stopped, his light joining hers in shining down the tunnel. 

"What is it?" he asked her. 

"Nothing," Scully shook her head. "It was nothing. Let's go." 

They resumed walking and a few minutes later the sensation
returned. This time Scully felt an urgency, an unspoken plea that
sounded in her ears. 

/Get out/

She sucked in air, turning again to find nothing but emptiness
behind her. 

"Scully?" Mulder had stopped and was now walking towards her. 

"It's nothing." Nerves, she told herself. The dreams keeping her
awake at night were starting to affect her judgment. 

/Leave/ 

Scully flashed the light behind Mulder and he noted that her hand
was shaking. She swallowed hard and Mulder reached out to touch her
elbow. "Why don't you go back up to the surface? There's plenty
topside you can be doing." 

/You must leave this place/ 

A rushing sound filled her head and Scully leaned back against the
wall, her stomach twisting in fear as last night's horrifying dream
came back to her. She felt dizzy, as if she were falling. She
looked up at Mulder, her eyes wide as the realization set in. 

"Scully?" Mulder bent to look more closely at her. 

"Agents?" Sheriff Huitt's voice echoed towards them. "Agents, come
on back." 

"They found Rachel," Scully whispered. "It was her, last night. It
was her. She fell." 

***** 

Monday, October 12 
Silver King Hotel 
11:47 p.m. 

Scully opened her door to find her hotel room light on.  Mulder was
nowhere in evidence. She took her coat off before flopping onto the
bed and kicking her shoes off. She lay there quietly for a few
minutes, finally picking out the faint drumming of a shower in the
next room. She heard the water go off. A couple of minutes later
Mulder came out of his bathroom dressed in sweatpants and a
t-shirt. 

"Hey," he said softly, standing in her doorway. "Any preliminary
results on the autopsy?" 

"Lots," Scully pushed herself up until she was sitting against the
headboard of the bed. "Rachel wasn't strangled like the others. She
drowned." 

Mulder's mouth twitched but he said nothing. 

"She had bruises all over her body, but no burn marks. I couldn't
say for sure if a stun gun was used to subdue her or not but I
would say that she was definitely taken from her home." 

Mulder bent his head, pressing his fingers to his eyes. "How do we
know that?" 

"She was still wearing her pajamas." 

Mulder looked up. "Under her clothes? I saw her in the mine and she
was wearing street clothes." 

"They were Karen's clothes. Huitt identified them a couple of hours
ago for us." 

"She put them on to keep warm. Which means he took her to the same
place he took Karen to kill her. He stripped her naked and left the
clothes behind." Mulder walked to the chair by her window and sat
down. "We used a recent survey of the mine, tried to figure out
where the river is fed from, but there are just too many
possibilities." 

Scully gave a nod. "I think he's keeping them near an abandoned
shaft. Rachel tried to climb up the shaft and fell. She's covered
with bruises and there were splinters in her hands and knees. She
had a slight concussion on the left side of her head. My guess is
she didn't really realize it when she hit the water. The
temperature would have sent her into immediate shock and she
drowned shortly thereafter." 

"Last night?" Mulder asked, watching her expression carefully. 

"Yes," Scully turned her face away. "Sometime last night." 

"You dreamed it." 

"No. Mulder, I..." Scully took a deep breath. "The dream I had last
night was consistent with the dreams I was having before Rachel
disappeared. That you see a connection between them is coincidence.
Besides, I didn't dream about the water." 

"Oh, well, water. Sure." Mulder leaned back in the chair, crossing
his arms and giving her an incredulous look. "Sometimes you amaze
me, Scully." 

Scully glanced at the alarm clock. 12:03 a.m. She rose and picked
her coat up from the foot of her bed, moving to hang it up in the
wardrobe as she spoke. "I seem to spend a lot of time amazing you,
Mulder." 

Mulder tilted his head, unsure if she was flirting with him or not.
She turned to face him but neither one of them spoke. She took a
hesitant step forward and then gave him a small smile. 

"Happy birthday, Mulder." 

He blinked at her, looked at the clock and then back at her. "I'd
say for my birthday, I get to pick where you kiss me." 

She shook her head. "Not what I had in mind." 

"Ooooo, Agent Scully. Did you bring the handcuffs?" he asked as she
crossed to stand behind him. Scully placed her hands on his
shoulders.  "I don't think I saw daylight at all today," Mulder
mumbled, relaxing into her touch.  Scully's hands squeezed his
shoulders lightly, her thumbs kneading the ridge of his shoulder
blades. 

"Mmmmm," he groaned, letting his head dropped forward as she
massaged his neck. His hair was still damp from the shower; a tiny
drop ran down the side of his neck. Scully bent and kissed it away.
Mulder gave a small gasp, turning to glance back at her. 

Scully looked nearly as surprised as he felt. Taking a deep breath,
he lowered his chin to his chest, waiting for her to continue.
After a few long seconds, she did, her fingers gently stroking over
the back of his neck. Silence filled the room, each of them
thinking back on the night in Morgantown. 

Scully took deep, even breaths. She was going to do it. Tonight.
She would kiss his lips. A quick kiss, to be certain, but it would
be a start. Anything more would be too much of a start. 

But, oh, her breath caught - how would it be to make love slowly to
Mulder? Not the frenzied rush of Morgantown, instead an unhurried,
achingly slow seduction. Heat flashed through her belly before
sliding out to her arms and legs. She closed her eyes, remembering
the tender way he had kissed her afterwards. Slow and sweet, his
hands stroking leisurely across her back, much the same way she was
touching him now. 

With a sickening lurch of her stomach she remembered how she had
reacted. The way she had left him. Mulder had told her what he had
wanted from her that night - he simply didn't want her to leave.
She realized now that she had wanted the same thing. She had wanted
him back. He may have thought he was losing her but she had been
losing him just as certainly. Not to Diana but to the rift that had
sprung up between them after the X-Files closed. 

Scully felt a surge of gratitude for Mulder. For his dogged
determination in saving her, not just from a distant frozen grave,
but from herself. His beliefs, however irrational they sometimes
were, challenged her and kept her from becoming a caricature of
herself. He appealed to the nearly forgotten child in her. His
sense of wonder in a world that had treated him so callously was
reassuring somehow. 

She bent down, her heart aching with love for him and kissed his
neck again. Mulder closed his eyes, giving himself over to the
sensation as she placed a line of kisses along his jaw. She moved
to stand in front of him, still softly kissing his cheeks, his
nose, his chin. Mulder's hands reached forward and rested on her
hips, urging her closer. 

"Tell me what you want for your birthday, Mulder." she whispered as
she nipped at his earlobe. 

"Whatever you're planning is fine." 

"I wasn't planning this." Mulder guided her down and Scully came
willingly, sitting on his left leg, her right arm around his
shoulders. She raised her hand to comb his hair back. "I have been
thinking, Mulder, that maybe I was being hasty when I said we were
being hasty." 

"Scully, don't tease." Mulder kissed the join of her shoulder and
neck. 

Scully wrapped both arms around him, holding him to her. "We need
to set some new rules." 

Mulder lifted his head from her shoulder, meeting her eyes and
nodded. "I'm fielding all suggestions." 

Neither spoke, their eyes searching each others, the implications
sinking in. 

"So I guess there aren't any rules tonight, Mulder." 

His eyes darkened and she kissed the corner of his mouth, not
daring to kiss his lips just yet. Mulder gave her a smile, "No
rules?" 

Scully considered, swallowed, and then spoke. "I think my gift to
you should be a moratorium on the one-kiss-a-day rule." 

"You're only saying that because you're over your limit." 

"What are you going to do about it?" 

His hand stroked along her side slowly, just missing her breast,
and she fought the urge to move so his fingers would rest where she
really wanted them. "I'm going to kiss you, Scully." 

Scully took in a shaky breath. "Anywhere interesting?" 

Mulder gave her a lazy smile. "Everywhere interesting." 

Before she could reply, he slid one hand into her hair, pulling her
mouth to his. Yes, god yes, she thought as his lips angled slowly
against hers. Her whole body thrummed with excitement as the kiss
deepened. She shifted on his lap, moving closer to him. His tongue
teased hers, intensifying the ache to feel him inside her. Mulder
moaned, his arms tightening around her before he slid an arm under
her legs and stood up. Cradling her against his chest he moved
towards the bed. The room seemed to spin as her mind repeated his
last words over and over. 

/Everywhere interesting/ 

He laid her carefully on the bed, leaning over her without putting
his weight on her. He gave her a few soft kisses, barely brushing
her lips with his. Mulder's fingers brushed the hair away from her
face before tracing the outline of her jaw. Then he stood up,
stepping away from the bed, just looking at her. Under his heated
gaze Scully fought to keep her breathing even, anticipation making
her heart hammer against her breastbone. His eyes wandered
appreciatively over her body. Scully felt her nipples tighten,
remembering the feeling of that mouth on her. 

"Come here, Mulder." She stretched her hand out. 

He chewed his lower lip thoughtfully. "I was going to impress you
with my self-control and leave." 

"There's more than one way to impress a gal." 

Mulder gave her the lopsided smile that always melted her resolve.
"Not tonight," he said kneeling next to the bed as she rolled over
to face him. 

"Not while on assignment," she clarified. 

Mulder nodded and leaned forward to kiss her forehead chastely.
"But as soon as we're back in D.C., I'll be wanting my birthday
gift." 

Scully smiled and gave him a small nod. Mulder ran his hand lightly
across her shoulder and down her arm, giving her fingers a gentle
squeeze when he reached them. Letting out a huge sigh, he stood and
moved to leave her room. 

"Hey, Scully," he leaned back through the connecting doorway. 

"Yes?" 

"Lock this door tonight." 

"You don't scare me, Mulder." 

He gave her a wolfish smile and her stomach fluttered. "Lock it
anyway." 

Scully's eyebrow lifted. He winked at her and shut the door.
Heaving her own sigh, Scully crossed the room and locked the door. 

***** 

End 9/15 







=====
********
"If I sit long enough it just comes to me."
Phillip Padgett, 'Milagro'

Is your mouse flabby and listless?  Come work it out here   http://alanna.net/sue

********

From: Suzanne Schramm <sister_suze@yahoo.com>

*****

Queen's Gambit 10/15 
See part 1 for disclaimer, etc. 

***** 

Tuesday, October 13 
Summit County Sheriff's Office 
9:19 a.m. 

Adelaide's box sat in the middle of the conference table, its
contents spilled out in front of Mulder, Scully and Antonelli. A
t.v. in the corner played the video tape that had been found in the
box. An interview with Collins by one of the local t.v. stations
had been first on the tape; now it was showing the exterior of the
prison from the night of his execution. 

Antonelli shook his head as Mulder rewound the tape. "I don't know
what you think you'll find on there. Collins is dead and we're just
wasting time playing with his junk." He threw the scrapbook in
front of him back in the box. "If he's taking them all to the same
place we need to be looking for it. He may have left more behind
than just their clothes. He may have left fingerprints or something
that will help us nail him." Antonelli continued to gather up
papers, stuffing them in the box, his movements jerky. 

"We have officers searching in the mines," Mulder said. "Maybe you
should take a couple of hours, go home, get some rest." 

"Dammit! I won't, you know I won't. I'll rest when we find him."
Antonelli began to tremble.  He pressed his lips together tightly
as he fought for control of his emotions. "I'm going up to the
mine," he said, picking up his coat. "I can't just sit here,
waiting for you to start reading minds." 

Antonelli left the room just as the video of Collins began to play
again. Mulder looked over at Scully, "I'm going with him," he told
her. 

Mulder caught up to Antonelli in the parking lot, falling into step
beside him. "Who is he?" Antonelli stopped walking, turning to grab
Mulder's arm. "I don't want to hear your mumbo-jumbo about white
male, 25-40, above average intelligence. I don't want to hear that
bullshit. I just want you to tell me who he is and how we find
him." 

"I think it's more complicated than that." 

"Shit," Antonelli resumed walking to his truck, calling out over
his shoulder. "You don't have a fucking clue, do you?" 

"I believe that Collins set this whole thing up. But our killer is
in it for another reason." Mulder followed him to the truck.
"Collins is just a means to an end for him, a way to throw us off
his trail." 

"So we're chasing ghosts and not the killer?" Antonelli climbed in
the truck, leaning over to unlock the door for Mulder. "But you're
the only one chasing ghosts, Mulder. The idea may have crossed my
mind but I certainly wouldn't have taken it seriously." 

"I don't necessarily mean that he's using Collins as a cover for
his identity. I meant that he's using Collins as a cover for his
motive." 

"So what's his motive?" Antonelli started the truck. 

"It's a game to him. He's smarter than us, or thinks he is. This is
his way of getting our attention." 

"Getting our attention?" Antonelli's knuckles turned white on the
steering wheel. "He killed Rachel and Karen and those other girls
simply to get our attention? What the hell did he plan on doing
after he had it?" 

"Why did he want our attention in the first place? Let's get a list
of everyone who was involved with the original investigation. We
need to start looking for someone who feels they got slighted the
first time around." 

***** 

Scully was half-watching Collins' interview on t.v. as she slowly
put away his possessions. After Antonelli's outburst there wasn't
much left to clean up. 

"Dana, can I have a minute?" 

Scully turned around to see Lewis Scully in the doorway. 

"Certainly," she lifted the remote to turn down the volume on the
t.v. "Come on in." 

Lewis ducked his head but didn't enter the room. "I won't be here
long, I need to get going. I was going to call and talk to you but
I felt like this should really be done in person." He cleared his
throat and took a hesitant step forward. 

"What's that?" Scully prompted. 

"I'm sure by now you've looked at the list of Collins' visitors. I
know that it must have looked like I was hedging on it." Lewis sat
down next to Scully, reaching his hand out as if he meant to touch
hers before pulling his hand back and cracking his knuckles
instead. 

"I did visit Collins in prison. I didn't say anything at first
because I didn't think it was relevant but I realized last night
that it looks rather suspicious." 

Scully said nothing, waiting for him to continue. 

"Collins was my first big case. I know Mulder got all the kudos in
the press but it certainly helped my cache around the office. It
also broadened my horizons, got me interested in what creates
monsters like Collins." 

Lewis paused, turning to watch the t.v again. 

"I've been going to school nights at the University of Utah to get
a degree in psychology. Rumor has it that A.D. Logan is looking for
new talent in the VCS. God knows I'm going nowhere here in Salt
Lake. I went to visit Collins before he was executed to try and get
a glimpse of the why and how of him for my thesis." 

"And did you?" 

Lewis looked Scully in the eye. "Only in the limited sense. Collins
was a game player. He only showed you what he thought you wanted to
see. If you wanted to see a psychotic lunatic, that's what he
showed you." Lewis gestured at the t.v. "In the case of Adelaide
Harrington, he was a 'dear boy' who somehow went horribly wrong." 

"You know Adelaide?" 

Lewis nodded. "I made this tape for her." They both watched as the
interview ended. The picture rolled a couple of times and then
showed the outside of the prison. "She asked me if I would, I don't
know, sorta document for her the Collins that I saw." 

"Really? I met Adelaide. I got the impression that she didn't
believe Collins was capable of such violence." 

Lewis shrugged and stood up. "I'm just telling you my impression.
Look, I need to leave. We've had a family emergency," he cleared
his throat. "I just didn't want you to get the wrong idea about
me." 

***** 

Tuesday, October 13 
Summit County Sheriff's Office 
5:43 p.m. 

Scully was opening her car door when Mulder and Antonelli returned.
She paused, waiting in the opened door as Mulder jogged across the
parking lot to talk to her. 

"Ditching me so soon?" He gave her a tired smile. "You should stay
for the party. I found a pinata that looks just like Kersh's head."
 
"I wanted to go talk to Adelaide again. I'll be back in an hour." 

Scully watched Antonelli trudging wearily towards the building.
"How's he doing?" 

Mulder shook his head. "We still haven't found anything in the
mines." 

"Lewis dropped by this morning just after you left. He admitted to
visiting Collins but claims he was just doing research for his
psychology thesis." 

Mulder raised his eyebrows. "You believe that?" 

"It's worth checking into. He had to leave in a hurry but, at the
very least, we should look at the notes he made on those visits." 

Mulder glanced over his shoulder as Antonelli climbed the stairs.
"Antonelli told me he had audio tapes from the visits he and Huitt
made. I'm going to run through them tonight. Hurry back and I'll
teach you the finer points of wire tap duty." 

Scully got into the car. "I'd rather bat that pinata around." 

"It's a date." Mulder shut the car door, giving her a small wave
before he turned and went inside. 

***** 

Tuesday, October 13 
Adelaide Harrington's Home 
6:04 p.m. 

"Why hello!" Adelaide smiled widely, all her teeth in place. "Did
you decide to arrest me after all?" 

"No," Scully returned the smile. "I just wanted to ask you a few
more questions. Do you mind? Is this a bad time?" 

"Come in, come in!" Adelaide seemed quite pleased to have a
visitor. "I was just settling in to watch the news. There was a
teaser about Park City, some girl they found in the mine yesterday.
Do you know anything about that?" 

Scully looked down at the floor as Adelaide shut the door. "You
knew that Rachel disappeared?" 

"Why yes, that was the day you came to visit me..." Adelaide
trailed off, the realization sinking in. "Oh dear Lord," she
whispered. "Not Rachel." 

Adelaide reached out, taking hold of Scully's arm for support.
Scully led her to the couch, helping her to sit and taking a seat
beside her. Adelaide continued to hold Scully's arm, her fingers
trembling. 

"How is Jessie doing?" Adelaide asked, her eyes wet. "They were so
close, those two. So sweet with each other." 

"He's hanging in there," Scully told her. "He's very determined to
find the person who did this." 

"Oh heavens, yes. Jessie always did have a one-track mind. That
boy, when he was younger, he never missed a trick. He was always
two steps ahead of the rest of us." Adelaide gave her a watery
smile. "What was it that you wanted to ask me?" 

"There was another FBI agent who came to talk to you? A man named
Lewis Scully?" 

"Oh yes, Lewis. A very nice young man. He was doing a paper about
Randy, but it was very hush-hush. He didn't want me to tell
anyone." 

"He said that?" Scully leaned forward. 

"No, no. Well, not in so many words. He just seemed rather
secretive about the whole thing. He wanted to hear about what Randy
was like as a boy. He was looking for some kind of factor or
something-or-other he called it. Reasons why Randy would turn out
badly." Adelaide leaned back, resting against the back of the couch
with her eyes closed. 

"I still don't see any reason for it. In my opinion death
frightened Randy. He and Jessie had a close brush with it as
children, there was an accident that claimed the life of one of
their friends. The three of them used to play in the mines, despite
stern warnings from their parents. One day the mine caved in and
only Jessie and Randy made it out." 

Adelaide opened her eyes, staring across the room without blinking.
"Randy was never the same after that. He became withdrawn and
moody. At the end of that summer they began junior high and fell in
with different crowds. Jessie was into sports, Randy started in
with a rougher group. I didn't see the two of them together much
after that." 

Adelaide gave Scully's arm a squeeze. "But where are my manners? A
cold night like this and I don't offer you anything?" She struggled
to her feet, waving off Scully's attempt to help her. "Let me just
get us both a cup of tea, then you can ask your questions." 

***** 

Tuesday, October 13 
Summit County Sheriff's Office 
8:40 p.m. 

After over two hours of listening to Randy Collins ramble and brag
Mulder was ready for a break. God, he had hated wiretap duty.
Truthfully his attention had begun to wander.  Antonelli had been
right, there wasn't anything useful on them. 

On the tape Collins had lapsed into silence, the sudden absence of
voice snapping Mulder back to reality. What was the last question?
He rewound the tape to hear Antonelli wearily asking where Sarah
Fitzgerald's body was. 

"You're boring me, Jess. You're a one note tune. Borrrrr-ing,"
Collins sang. "Here we sit, old buddies..." Antonelli gave a snorting
laugh. "No? Okay, well, we had some good times as kids, didn't we?"
 
"That was a long time ago. Before you picked psychopath as your
career." 

"I never gave much thought to a career. Guess that's how I ended up
like I did. You, though, you always knew what you were gonna be. So
what happened to that? How come you're still walking around Park
City waving your little nightstick?" 

"I like Park City. It's home." 

"Yeah, you're a fucking pillar of the community, ain't ya? Bet you
never tell anyone about how we was kids together, the stuff we used
to do." 

Antonelli sighed. "Where did you put Sarah, Randy?" 

Collins hummed tunelessly for half a minute before asking softly,
"Do you ever think about Bob?" 

There was a pause, lasting nearly a minute. As the tape hissed and
scratched Mulder wondered if perhaps it had actually ended. Then
Antonelli answered. "No." 

"I do," Collins sighed. "I think about him all the time. I guess
I'll be seeing him soon, eh?" 

Antonelli didn't reply, instead there was a squeal as he pushed his
chair impatiently away from the table. "Quit fucking with me,
Randy. Where's Sarah Fitzgerald?" 

Collins laughed. "She's with Bob, man. We all will be before this
is over." 

"She's in the mine?" 

"Bob ain't in the mine. Don't you get that yet?" Collins' laugh
turned high-pitched and Mulder could hear him hitting the table in
his glee. "He's out, man. He's out and he's mad as hell." 

"You should have plead insanity," Antonelli told him. "You're
certifiable." There was a clatter as he picked up the recorder,
muffling Collins' continued laughter. "Interview is terminated at,
uh, 3:06 p.m." 

***** 

Tuesday, October 13 
Daly Avenue 
8:54 p.m. 

Another storm had moved in, the wind blowing the falling snow so
that it appeared to be coming down sideways. Scully realized she
was hunched over the steering wheel and forced herself to sit back.
Through the white fury beating down on the car she was able to make
out a stop sign up ahead. She stopped, looked both ways and then
pushed down on the gas. The back tires spun but the car didn't
move. 

"Come on," she muttered, willing the car forward. She stepped
harder on the gas and the car lurched into the intersection. There
was a honk and she instinctively steered to her right, just missing
the Suburban that seemed to have come from nowhere. She turned the
wheel left to correct but the car continued to move to its right.
She slammed on the brakes, sending the back end of the car off the
road. When the car stopped its front end was at least three feet
higher than the back end. 

Scully opened her door and tentatively stepped out. Her foot slid
through the snow and she found herself skiing backwards down the
side of a drainage ditch. She grabbed at the car door but missed,
ending up face down for her trouble. For the briefest of moments
she was grateful that no one was around to witness her pratfall. 

Pushing herself upright, she felt in her pocket for her cell phone
but it wasn't there. Scully carefully climbed up the side of the
ditch and opened the car door. No phone. Had she lost it in the
snow? She looked back down the embankment and then turned to look
down Main Street. There was a hotel half a block away. It would be
faster, and warmer, to just walk there and call for a tow truck.
Scully let out a small sigh and hunched her shoulders within her
coat, setting out across the street. 

She had reached the opposite side of the street when a truck pulled
up alongside her. The passenger side door came open. 

"Dana? Need a ride?" 

Gratitude filled her as she recognized the voice. "Thanks! What I
really need is the number for a towing company." 

"Climb in, I'll take you. It's not a fit night for man nor beast." 

Scully climbed into the truck, slamming the door shut and settling
back on the bench seat. At the click of the doors' locks her mind
clicked over the niggling thought she'd been having all day. 

The prison footage at the end of Adelaide's tape. There had been a
truck parked at the side of the Frontage Road when the van with
Collins' body drove past. This was the same truck. 

At that moment Scully knew she had accepted the wrong ride on this
snowy night. 

***** 

End 10/15 



=====
********
"If I sit long enough it just comes to me."
Phillip Padgett, 'Milagro'

Is your mouse flabby and listless?  Come work it out here   http://alanna.net/sue

********

From: Suzanne Schramm <sister_suze@yahoo.com>
Date: Fri, 10 Mar 2000 06:48:24 -0800 (PST)
Subject: xfc: Queen's Gambit  (11 of 15)
Source: xfc

From: Suzanne Schramm <sister_suze@yahoo.com>

*****

Queen's Gambit 11/15 
See part 1 for disclaimer, etc. 

***** 

Tuesday, October 13 
Summit County Sheriff's Office 
9:03 p.m. 

"Those girls, they never noticed me. They never thought of me as
anything special."  Randall Collins gave the camera a nasty smile.
"But you should have heard them, 'Oh Randy, please don't! Don't
hurt me!' They were begging me, man! Begging..." he broke off into
a chuckle. "They noticed me all right." 

Mulder looked down at the picture on the table. Three boys,
probably only nine or ten, slouching against a low fence trying to
look tough or maybe they were squinting their eyes against the
bright sunlight. That had to be Antonelli in the middle, the tall
tow-headed boy with a crew cut. The boy on his right was Collins,
his arms crossed and his lips twisted in a sneer that was an early
precursor to the malice in his future mug shots. The third boy was
smaller and slighter but three decades had not dimmed his freckles.
Mulder flipped the picture over but there was no clue as to the
third boy's identity. 

Setting the picture aside, Mulder picked up the list Antonelli had
drafted of all law enforcement agents involved in the first
investigation. It ran to over a hundred names since Antonelli had
been thorough and included everyone who had had even a peripheral
role. Too many names. 

Too many years. Why wait until now to get even? On screen Collins
began to howl and wail, enjoying himself immensely as he imitated
one of his victims. Mulder hit the mute button, letting Collins
continue his disgusting act in silence. 

The original idea had been Collins'. Somewhere along the way he had
convinced someone else to play along. Someone who, unbeknownst to
Collins, had his own agenda. Mulder looked up, watching Collins
laugh silently. Collins had enjoyed killing those girls. He had
done it because he had enjoyed the power it had given him. He had
done it because he had craved the sexual rush associated with
torturing the girls. He had enjoyed the fear that his crimes had
sent through this small town. And he had enjoyed the idea that he
could make Park City fear him again from beyond the grave. 

"Agent Mulder?" Mulder looked up to see Huitt in the doorway. "Do
you need a ride?" 

"No," Mulder shook his head. "Scully called and said she was on her
way back to the station." He glanced at his watch. "But that was
half an hour ago." 

"The roads are pretty bad out there," Huitt said, giving Mulder a
reassuring smile. "Where was she coming from?" 

"Adelaide Harrington's." 

"Empire Canyon," Huitt rubbed his chin thoughtfully. "She might be
stuck in a snowbank. That's a tricky road, especially without snow
tires. I'm going past there on my way home, I'll keep an eye out
for her." Huitt lifted his hand in farewell and left. 

Mulder tilted Adelaide's box to get at the loose papers still on
the bottom. He lifted out an 8 x 10 manila envelope, turning it
over to see "Mulder" written on the outside. Mulder blinked. He
knew what the envelope contained. Knew already that Scully wasn't
coming back from Adelaide's. His fingers shook as he tore at one
end to open it. 

The strong gods pine for my abode, 
And pine in vain the sacred Seven; 
But thou, meek lover of the good! 
Find me, and turn thy back on heaven. 
Nb3 Rc6; Nd4 Rc7; Nb5 Rc5; Nxc3 Nxc3; Rxc3 Rxc3; Rxc3 Qb2.  

On t.v. Collins stood up, silently shouting and pointing at the
camera, his face contorted with fury. 

***** 

When Scully awoke it was dark. So dark she wasn't sure for a few
moments if she was awake or dreaming. She pushed herself to a
sitting position, her muscles protesting from hours of inactivity
and the cold, slightly damp surface she had been laying on. Her
heart squeezed painfully at the realization that this wasn't a
dream.  She took a deep breath, trying to force herself to relax,
to think. It didn't quite work, she could feel the fear bubbling up
inside her. 

She stretched her hands out slowly in front of her. Nothing. She
felt to her right and then to her left before connecting with a
rock wall. Her hand pressed against it as she shifted to stand, her
balance precarious in the dark. She stood slowly; her shoulders
hunched and head tucked down as if she expected to meet up with the
ceiling at any second. 

Her legs trembled beneath her as she rose. Her breathing sounded
frantic and harsh in her ears as she gulped in air. Once she was
standing erect she raised her right hand, tentatively feeling for
the roof of the tunnel. She found it and judged that she had about
eight or nine inches of headroom. 

Her eyes began to ache from straining into the blackness. She took
slower breaths, listening for... anything. Anything to give her a
clue. There was a distant drip of water and the ticking of her
watch. Her watch! She touched her watch, pushing in the button. An
eerie blue-green light shone out, seeming brighter than daylight in
the inky air. 3:23. Morning or afternoon she wondered? The date
read "14", giving no clue other than that it was already tomorrow.
What time did she get in the truck? Just past nine? Closer to 8:30?
She couldn't remember. 

Which way was out? Worse, was she near an open shaft? Would she
fall into a shaft if she tried to walk out? How would she even know
she was going the right direction? What if she wandered further
into the mine instead of out? She had to be near the same place
that Rachel and the other victims had been taken. 

Scully illuminated her watch face again. 3:24. She held the light
on and moved her wrist around. It didn't help; there was no way to
use the watch to see. Dejected she dropped her hands and then
raised them again, frantically searching her coat pocket for the
flashlight she kept in it. 

/Hey Scully, light?/ 

Mulder had it. She had given him the light when they checked out
Karen's Explorer. 

"Damn," she leaned back against the rock wall, her mind racing. 
The dripping sound was coming from her left. She wondered if that
was where the shaft was. For a few paralyzing seconds Rachel's
dream came back to her, causing her stomach to twist in fear. 

Pushing her apprehension away Scully turned to her right and began
to feel her way slowly in the dark. She counted off her steps,
mapping out in her mind this prison as she cautiously inched
forward. 

***** 

Wednesday, October 14 
Summit County Sheriff's Office 
5:24 a.m. 

"Remember when you told me to get some rest?" Antonelli asked,
trying unsuccessfully to smile. "Well, it's time I returned the
favor." 

Mulder shook his head, pushing past Antonelli to enter the
conference room. "I'm not tired." 

"Bullshit." Antonelli followed him inside. "You look like hell." 

"I wouldn't cast stones if I were you," Mulder gestured at
Antonelli's disheveled appearance. "Do you even change your clothes
anymore?" 

"I happen to like this shirt." Antonelli succeeded in drawing a
fleeting smile from Mulder. "We're going to find her. We have three
days and we've already ruled out nearly half the tunnels." 

Mulder picked up Adelaide's box, dumping its contents onto the
table. "He was here. We all went through that box yesterday morning
and that envelope wasn't in there." 

"Then we just need to narrow down the list to people who had access
to this room." Antonelli picked up the list. "You said something
last night about Lewis Scully? Was he in here yesterday?" 

Mulder began to pace in a tight circle. "He came in and spoke with
Scully. To my knowledge he didn't put anything in the box, Scully
would have noticed something like that." 

"But would Lewis really do it? I mean, sure we joshed around with
him ten years ago, but that doesn't seem like the sort of thing
that drives a man to murder." Antonelli gave a helpless shrug. 

Mulder stopped, shuffling through the papers on the table. "Where's
that list?" 

"What list?" Antonelli shook his head. 

"The list of Collins' visitors. There's someone we're overlooking."
 
Mulder found the list, running his finger over the names. "We have
you. We have Huitt. We have Lewis. Hell, we even have Adelaide a
couple of times. Some reporters." Mulder tossed the list to
Antonelli. "Most of these visits are well documented. The only ones
I doubt were recorded are the ones with Adelaide but I have a hard
time wrapping my mind around an ninety year old woman subduing and
strangling five young healthy women. Even if she did use a stun
gun." 

"I've been trying to get in touch with Lewis ever since you called
me last night - no luck." 

"Let's try again," Mulder said. "I'd like to hear what he got from
his interviews with Collins." Antonelli picked up the phone to call
Lewis, handing the visitor list back to Mulder. 

"Who are we missing?" Mulder muttered as he scanned through the
names. 

***** 
  
Scully could have sworn she had been creeping along for days but
her watch indicated that it was only 7:56. Only four and a half
hours since she had awoken in this dark hell. In that time she had
worked her way down one long corridor only to find a large wooden
door blocking her way. With anguish she remembered the splinters in
Anne Wyman's hands. Chances were Anne had made it this far as well.
For a couple of minutes Scully leaned against the door, alternately
angry and despairing. 

Which way now? 

First things first. The mine no longer seemed cold, after walking
so long it she was becoming quite warm. Scully took off her coat,
tying it around her waist. Then she turned around and started
counting her way back the way she had come, this time using the
opposite wall. 

After five hundred and sixty-three steps she reached her starting
point but pressed on. Twenty-nine steps later the wall ended.
Scully drew back, her pulse racing. Her foot tapped hesitantly
forward, meeting with solidity. She felt along the wall again, this
time discerning a corner. She shuffled her foot around it, relieved
to find the ground remained firm beneath her.  Scully turned the
corner and began counting again, starting over at one. 

Thirty-eight steps later she stopped. Scully turned, tilting her
head to listen. Drip. Drip. Drip. 

Drip. 

Drip. 

Scully was about to start resume walking when she heard the
shuffling noise again. She swallowed hard, her hand reaching
automatically for the weapon that should have been clipped on the
back of her belt. 

There was a muffled clatter and then she saw a beam of light skip
across the rock about twenty feet in front of her. It was coming
from the junction she had turned just a few minutes earlier. She
tensed against the wall, every muscle in her body shouting "run!". 

The light grew larger, the footsteps became more distinct. 
And then a boy rounded the corner, his flashlight shining into her
eyes. She squinted and raised her hand to block the beam as her
eyes watered. 

"Geez, lady, are you lost?" he asked. 

***** 

End 11/15 



=====
********
"If I sit long enough it just comes to me."
Phillip Padgett, 'Milagro'

Is your mouse flabby and listless?  Come work it out here   http://alanna.net/sue

********

From: Suzanne Schramm <sister_suze@yahoo.com>

*****

Queen's Gambit 12/15 
See part 1 for disclaimer, etc. 

***** 

Wednesday, October 14 
Summit County Sheriff's Office 
9:14 a.m. 

Mulder sat at the conference room table, tapping absent-mindedly on
the picture of Collins, Antonelli and the unidentified boy. 

/I keep having this dream about a young boy, probably eleven or
twelve, and he's buried alive.../
 
/Bob ain't in the mine, man. He's out.../ 

Mulder picked up the evidence bag containing the note found with
Leslie Parker. His finger traced over Collins' writing, "They know
not the subtle ways I keep, and pass, and turn again." 

Was Bob the boy in Scully's dreams? What if Collins was right and
Bob really was out there? But if that were true why would he want
revenge against the people who put Collins away? 

"Mulder?" Lewis Scully stepped into the conference room, setting a
box down on the table. "I heard about Dana, I'm so sorry." Mulder
blinked at him and then gestured at the box. "I see you've come
bearing gifts." 

"My thesis," Lewis took a three-ring binder from inside the box,
handing it to Mulder. 

"A Loner, A Killer: Socioeconomic Determinants in the Development
of Adolescent Violence," Mulder read aloud and then tossed it back
into Lewis' box. "I'm a little pressed for time here, suppose you
summarize." 

"Collins has never felt truly in control of his life, even when he
killed those girls. He was doing it to impress someone else." 

Mulder gave a nod, picking up where Lewis left off. "His father
left before he was born. Collins spent his entire life alternately
adoring his mother for raising him and hating her for driving his
father away. He was constantly attaching himself to authority
figures, looking for the father he never had." 

Lewis pulled out the chair next to Mulder and sat down. "It's my
opinion that Collins looked at this as one last prank," Lewis
gestured at the evidence bags on the table. 

"And to think my teachers said a cherry bomb in the girl's restroom
was incorrigible," Mulder murmured. 

"There's someone I want you to meet," Lewis said. "A woman named
Adelaide Harrington. She knew Collins as a boy. I think she can
give you a different sort of insight into what drove him." 

***** 

"How?" Scully sputtered, relief flooding through her. "Where did
you come from?" 

"Back there," the boy gestured with the light. "What are you doing
in here? Don't you have a flashlight?" 

Scully walked toward him, "You need to show me how to get out of
here. It's very important." 

The boy didn't move, giving her a disgusted look. "And then you'll
tell my dad and I'll be grounded. I don't think so. Besides, I'm
waiting for someone." The boy stepped back, leaning against the
wall with his arms crossed defiantly making the flashlight's beam
point at the roof of the mine. 

"Look, you don't want to be in here." Scully pulled her coat from
around her waist, searching the pockets for her ID. "I'm a federal
officer and I believe this mine is a crime scene. You and your
friend cannot be in here. Not to mention that it's just plain
dangerous to be wandering around in a mine." 

The boy laughed. "At least I have a flashlight! Talk about
dangerous." 

"What's your name?" Scully asked. 

"What's yours?" he snapped back. 

Scully held her badge close to his face. "See there, where it says
'Special Agent Dana Scully'? Now what's your name?" 

The boy pushed away from the wall, shining his light on her badge.
His eyes widened when he realized that it was real. "Robert
Elliott, ma'am.  Am I in trouble for being in here?" 

"Do you come in here a lot, Robert?" 

He shrugged. "Me and my friends come here sometimes, but we're
always very careful. You have to be. There are lots of shafts in
here.  And just call me 'Bob'.  'Robert' makes it sound like I'm in
trouble." 

"I really do need to get out of here, Bob. Can you help me?" 

Bob gave a glum nod and shone the light down the tunnel in the
direction he had come from. "Okay. But if my friend shows up we
have to hide, it's a game we're playing." 

***** 

Wednesday, October 14 
Main Street 
9:57 a.m. 

Lewis pulled over when they reached Scully's Taurus and the two men
walked towards it to take a closer look. It was slanted down the
drainage ditch, Scully's struggle up the embankment still visible
in the snow. 

"Did he force her off the road?" Lewis asked. 

"I don't think so.  I think she just slipped getting out of the
car." Mulder pointed down to where Scully's footprints came to the
side of the road. He walked across the road and pointed again. "See
here? She came across the road and started down Main Street." 

"There's no struggle," Lewis mused. "She knew her abductor." 

Mulder gave Lewis a tired smile. "Until about an hour ago I thought
it was you." 

"What changed your mind?" 

"Ralph Waldo Emerson." 

"Come again?" 

Mulder turned and headed back to Lewis' truck. "If the red slayer
think he slays, or if the slain think he is slain. They know not
the subtle ways I keep, and pass, and turn again." 

Lewis shook his head. "I'm not following you." 

"The poem has four stanzas. Four victims. Leslie, Anne, Karen and
now Scully." 

"What about Rachel?" 

"Rachel didn't get a poem or any chess moves. I thought at first it
was because she was found too early but now I think that Rachel was
part of another agenda. Antonelli taped his interviews with
Collins. In one of them Collins spoke of a friend from childhood
who was looking for a revenge of his own. I think it's possible
that this friend is working with Collins and went behind his back,
so to speak, to get Antonelli too." 

***** 

Scully wished Bob would walk a little faster. She had passed him
and now was walking just beyond the glow of the flashlight, trying
to get him to increase his pace a little. 

"Can you shine the light further down?" she asked him. 

"Sure," Bob replied unenthusiastically, tilting the light so that
the beam illuminated far off down the tunnel. Far enough that she
could see the wooden door that had stopped her the first time. 

"Does that door open?" Scully turned around to ask Bob. 

"Not from this side," he sighed. "You can't get out that way. I
keep telling everyone that but they never listen to me." 

"Everyone? The other women who were here? Did you see them?" 

"Shhhh." He held a finger to his lips. "He's coming." 

"Who's coming?" 

"Hide!" he whispered urgently turning the flashlight off. For a few
seconds Scully felt the darkness wheeling around her, disorienting
her all over again. 

"Bob," she called. "Turn the flashlight back on." 

"Shhhh." His voice sounded far away. With her hand to the wall
Scully took a few steps in his direction and then she heard the
door open at the far end. She turned around and saw the outline of
a man for a brief second. Her blood ran cold. 

Oh god. He's come back. 

***** 

Wednesday, October 14 
Adelaide Harrington's Home 
10:36 a.m. 

"Oh my," Adelaide smoothed her fingers over the picture. "I haven't
seen this in years. You say it was with Randy's things?" 

Mulder pointed to the third boy. "You know who this boy is?" 

"Bob Elliott," Adelaide looked out her kitchen window, her hands
trembling slightly. "The three of them were thick as thieves." 

"He died in the mine?" Mulder asked gently. 

"Yes, years ago. I told you all this before," Adelaide said to
Lewis. "There was an accident one day in the mine and Bob was
killed seen again." 

/When I was a kid I used to play in them with my friends. One of
them died in a cave-in.../ 

/Bob ain't in the mine. Don't you get that yet?/
 
"Which mine?" Mulder leaned forward. "Do you remember which mine
they played in?" 

"Just up the canyon," Adelaide waved her right hand. "They filled
the entrance with concrete after the accident." 

Mulder sat back, disappointed. Adelaide stared dreamily out the
kitchen window again and Mulder turned to follow her gaze. There
was an old shed, built directly against the mountain in Adelaide's
small backyard. It was leaning wearily to the left on its
foundation. Adelaide broke her reverie, smiling at Mulder. 

"Do you know that shed always scared Randy? He'd never go near it.
He swore it was haunted." Adelaide shook her head and chuckled.
"Haunted, I ask you, have you ever heard such a story? He told all
the neighborhood kids and none of them would go in there. So Jessie
has always mowed my lawn and shoveled my driveway. You can see what
a fine job he does. He was out here just last night, moving
something heavy into the shed. Probably another bag of salt." 

Mulder stood up abruptly, nearly knocking over his chair. "What
time?" 

"Oh, I don't know. It was after 'Nova'. Maybe around nine o'clock?"
Adelaide watched in bewilderment as Mulder raced for the front
door. "My goodness," she told Lewis. "It's only a bag of salt." 

***** 

End 12/15 



=====
********
"If I sit long enough it just comes to me."
Phillip Padgett, 'Milagro'

Is your mouse flabby and listless?  Come work it out here   http://alanna.net/sue

********

From: Suzanne Schramm <sister_suze@yahoo.com>

*****

Queen's Gambit 13/15 
See part 1 for disclaimer, etc. 

***** 

Wednesday, October 14 
Adelaide Harrington's Home 
10:51 a.m. 

"Mulder!" Lewis ran across the driveway in pursuit of Mulder,
bewildered, as he saw Mulder draw his gun and enter the shed. 

"What going on?" he asked after he followed Mulder inside and found
him standing in the center of the shed, gun down at his side. 

"You see that?" Mulder gestured at a nearly empty bag of rock salt.
 
"Yeah," Lewis nodded. "It's the same salt de-icing the driveway." 

"It's the only bag in here." 

Lewis looked around. The accumulated junk of a lifetime was stored
in the shed. An old lawn mower, an assortment of gardening tools, a
trunk, a lamp without its shade, and a rolled-up carpet were
scattered about them but Mulder was right. There wasn't another
large bag. 

"Antonelli?" Lewis nudged the bag of salt with his toe. "You think
he carried Scully in here last night?" Lewis lifted the lid on the
trunk, revealing moldering books and the stained test tubes and
beaker from an old chemistry set. "But where is she now?" 

"Wherever he's got her, he also has an hour's head start on us,"
Mulder said, pulling a flashlight from his pocket. With a pang he
realized it was Scully's. "He left just before you arrived this
morning to go home and shower." The two of them began to search
through the shed, shuffling boxes aside as they made their way to
the back of the structure. 

There was a long workbench with tools scattered across the top at
the far end of the shed. Its left end was pulled away from the wall
a couple of feet. Mulder came closer and saw two large hooks high
on the wall. There was also a metal ring hanging about four feet
off the ground in the center of the wall. Shining his light into
the corner he saw three rusted hinges. It wasn't a wall, Mulder
realized, it was a door. A long heavy board leaned against the leg
of the table - the door's crossbar. 

He gestured to Lewis and the two of them silently advanced on the
door. Lewis took up a position at the end of the workbench and gave
Mulder a nod. After a silent count of three Mulder pulled on the
ring. The door creaked open and Mulder stepped inside. Lewis came
to stand behind him, leaning to look around him into the blackness.

"What's back there?" Lewis asked. 

Mulder shone the light around, finding only a silent tunnel. "Ten
bucks says it ain't Elvis." 

***** 

Scully flattened herself against the wall, moving as quietly as she
could in the direction Bob had gone. She flinched, biting back a
surprised cry, when she felt a cold hand take hers. 

"This way," Bob whispered, tugging her forward in the dark. Her
coat slid from where she had draped it over her arm but she didn't
stop to pick it up. A flashlight's beam began sweeping toward them.
 
"Daaaaaaana..." her name echoed in the cavern. "Did you miss me,
sweetheart?" Bob pulled her into a small alcove just before the
light reached them. They both stood pressed against the wall as the
light shifted back and forth, relentlessly searching. 

Scully felt certain her breath was whistling loudly in the
stillness around her. He had to hear her, she tried to take deep
slow breaths, straining to hear his footsteps in the dark. Bob let
go of her hand. "I'm sorry," he whispered near her ear. 

Scully reached out to touch Bob, to reassure him, but her hand met
with only rock. Startled, she slid closer to where Bob had been
standing but found no one there. Had Bob crawled away? She crouched
down, her hands finding cold damp rock but no sign of Bob. The
light grew brighter in her peripheral vision. 

"Come on, Dana. I'm warning you, if you jump out at me I'll be
really pissed. Why make this harder than it has to be?" 

He was nearly there. Scully froze, trying to make herself as small
as possible. If he just went past her and deeper into the mine she
could get out. The door must have been locked from the other side
earlier when she found it. But it would have to be unlocked now. 
Her heart stuttered when the flashlight stopped a few inches away
from her. 

"Why is it that you all hide in the same damn place?" Antonelli
laughed. "I was hoping you, at least, would be more challenging."
The light moved to shine into her eyes, blinding her. 

Scully lunged at his legs, succeeding in surprising him enough that
he lost his balance. The flashlight clattered to the floor, casting
large shadows against the rock wall. She scrambled away from
Antonelli and began to run towards the door, her footing uncertain
in the dark. 

Antonelli recovered fast, chasing after her. He tackled her,
bringing them both down hard onto the floor of the mine. The wind
knocked out of her, Scully tried to gulp in air, panicking when the
weight of his body restricted her movements. She struggled, finding
one of the rail tracks that ran through the mine and used it as
leverage to pull herself forward. Antonelli grappled for her in the
dark, seizing a handful of her shirt and yanking her backwards. 

Scully kicked out, catching Antonelli in the knee. He fell forward,
sending them both back to the ground. Scully rolled away, breaking
Antonelli's grip on her shirt. She rose again, scrabbling towards
the door. Cursing, Antonelli chased after her, catching her arm and
pulling back hard, causing her to stumble sideways. 

Light flashed in pounding waves through Scully's head as she
slammed into the rock wall. Dazed, she continued forward, still
trying to free her arm from Antonelli's grip. He roughly pulled her
right arm behind her back, twisting it painfully. 

"You can't leave now, Dana. We have unfinished business, you and I.
If you get out of here alive it sort of ruins the whole effect for
Mulder." Antonelli pushed her forward, back toward where the
flashlight lay. "I liked you, Dana. If it hadn't been for Rachel, I
might have left you alone and gone after Mulder personally." 

"Why Rachel?" Scully gasped. She could taste blood in her mouth
from where she had met up with the wall. 

"I've been asking myself the same damn question. Why Rachel?"
Antonelli bent down to retrieve the flashlight, pulling Scully
along with him and she whimpered as her arm twisted higher against
her back. 

"Did she find out about you?" 

"You think I killed Rachel?" Antonelli let out a small anguished
laugh. "It wasn't me, it was your fucking partner." 

"Mulder?" Scully shook her head. "It wasn't Mulder." 

Antonelli walked deeper into the mine, pushing Scully ahead of him.
"Of course it was Mulder. He figured it out - finally. But instead
of confronting me he decided to play. Queen's gambit, Dana. Do you
know what that is? He captured my queen hoping that I'd confess but
he was wrong. It's check mate now." 

"No," Scully tried to pull away but Antonelli didn't loosen his
grip. "You're wrong." 

"We'll see." Antonelli turned the same corner she had made her way
around just before Bob found her. Scully fervently hoped that Bob
was on his way to get help. "Do you know what happened to me? Do
you?" Antonelli shook her, sending spikes of pain down her arm. 

"No," Scully's shoulder was beginning to go numb as the nerve was
pinched tighter. Her stomach growled and she could feel the
shakiness starting in her legs as the initial adrenaline rush left
her body. 

"You think I didn't know from the beginning who it was killing
those girls? I knew it was Randy. I goddamned knew it. But I let it
go, let it build. You know why?" 

Keep him talking, Scully told herself. Get him off guard. "Why?" 

"I needed a big case. That's how careers are built. If the body
count went high enough the case would go national. I figured I'd
let Randy go until we had a decent body count and then I'd be the
fucking hero. But guess what happened instead?" Antonelli let go of
her arm, grabbing her neck and pushing her up against the wall. 

Scully tried to take a breath but found that she couldn't, his hand
was pressing down on her windpipe. She clawed at his wrist, trying
to free herself. 

"Your fucking partner comes out of nowhere and wham, bam, thank you
ma'am - he's a goddamned hero. He goes back to DC with all the
accolades, gets his own department, a pretty partner and I get
shit! I get worse than shit! I get treated like a goddamned
imbecile for not spotting Randy sooner! Can you believe it? But
it's not like I can tell them I knew the whole time. Fuck!" 

Antonelli tightened his grip. Scully could feel her trachea begin
to crush. She gasped desperately for air, her eyes swimming with
tears. Bright arcs of light flickered through her vision and she
realized she was losing consciousness. She tried to kick, tried to
push away from the wall but Antonelli didn't relent, leaning his
weight against her. 

"It wasn't him." A young voice called out. 

A beam of light bounced across the wall, surprising Antonelli into
relaxing his hold as he half-turned to find the source. He went
still for a long moment when he caught sight of Bob and then he let
go of Scully. She slid to the floor, nauseated and dizzy, her limbs
shaking uncontrollably. 

"Bob, run!" Scully wheezed, her throat on fire. 

"Who the fuck are you?" Antonelli took a menacing step forward. 

"Leave her alone." 

"Go!" Scully's voice was barely above a whisper. "Get out of here!"

Antonelli took a menacing step forward, "You picked the wrong place
to play, kid." 

Bob gave him a curious look. "You picked this place." 

"Leave," Scully gasped. "Go get help." 

Bob glanced at her, but stood his ground as Antonelli slowly walked
towards him. 

"How did you get in here?" 

Bob shrugged. "I forget." 

"Don't mess with me, kid. I asked you a question." 

Bob broke into laughter. "You don't remember me, do you?" 

Antonelli paused in his advance, shifting his weight indecisively. 

"I remember you." Bob stopped laughing abruptly, his face
hardening. "I've never forgotten you." 

Scully blinked. With Antonelli's light shining directly on Bob's
face he looked a lot like the boy in the picture with.... No. That
wasn't possible. Bob must be that boy's son. 

Antonelli took another hesitant step, stopping about six or seven
feet from Bob. "I know you," his words were thick. 

"You can't keep hurting people, Jessie. It's wrong." 

"Bob?" Antonelli's voice was a hoarse whisper. "Oh my god. Bob." 

Bob smiled. "You should never have left me here. Did you think I
wouldn't find a way out? Randy knew I was out. Knew you needed to
be punished. You should never have let Randy hurt those girls. They
blame you." 

Antonelli checked behind Bob with his flashlight, looking to see if
there was someone else with him. "Who are you really? Is Mulder
behind this?" 

Bob shook his head. "You're the only one to blame. I should have
stopped you sooner." 

Bob took a step forward and Antonelli stumbled backwards. Scully
pushed herself up so that she was sitting against the wall, her
eyes darting back and forth between the two of them as Antonelli
retreated towards her. 

"I used to be afraid of you," Bob took another step. "But I'm not
anymore. I thought you might stop when you lost Rachel. When you
saw what it felt like but you just don't get it." 

Antonelli shook his head vigorously. "You expect me to believe that
you," he shone his light up and down Bob's small frame, "were
responsible for Rachel? You little shit...." Antonelli grabbed
Scully's arm, pulling her up and dragging her with him as he walked
backwards, his light wobbling a little as he kept it fixed on Bob. 

"You're scared now. You should be," Bob was smiling slightly as he
followed them. 

"You, you don't scare me." Antonelli sputtered, his voice
unnaturally high. 

"I tried to warn Rachel. I called to her, the same way I called to
Dana," Bob gave Scully a nod. "But when she wouldn't listen to my
warnings, I brought her into the mine and showed her what you did."
 
"You killed Rachel." Antonelli stumbled as they turned a corner,
his fingers gripping Scully's arm so tightly her arm began to go
numb. 

"You killed her. You and your secrets. You should never have left
me here. But it's your turn now." Bob came around the corner after
them, his face twisting malevolently. "You should never have left
me here!" 

***** 

End 13/15 



=====
********
"If I sit long enough it just comes to me."
Phillip Padgett, 'Milagro'

Is your mouse flabby and listless?  Come work it out here   http://alanna.net/sue

********
From: Suzanne Schramm <sister_suze@yahoo.com>

*****

Queen's Gambit 14/15 
See part 1 for disclaimer, etc. 

***** 

As Mulder stepped into the mine a chill draft blew past him,
sending a shiver down his spine. The door creaked on its hinges
behind them as Mulder and Lewis began advancing in the darkness,
each of them straining their eyes and ears for a clue. Lewis
stumbled, then bent down to pick up a coat. 

"Hey," he held it up for Mulder to shine the light on. "Is this
Dana's?" 

Mulder reached out and took the coat from Lewis, giving a grim nod.
"I think so." 

"Should we call for backup?" No sooner had the words left Lewis'
mouth than they heard a distant shriek. Dropping the coat, Mulder
took off in the direction of the scream with Lewis fast behind him.

They stopped abruptly when they came to a fork in the mine. 

Breathing harshly, Mulder illuminated first one passage, then the
other. Lewis gave him a helpless shrug. 

"It's over!" a young voice shouted from their left. "It's your
turn!" The two of them rushed in that direction. 

There was a bellow of anger. Another scream, higher pitched this
time. At the far end of the corridor a light bounced erratically
off the walls and ceiling. Mulder ran faster as he realized it was
Antonelli who was howling and cursing. Hope surged through Mulder
when he recognized Scully's voice, albeit strained, "Bob, no!" 

There was a rising screech. The light disappeared abruptly with a
scream that sent fear pounding through Mulder as it faded. Mulder
tightened his grip on his weapon, skidding around the corner. 

"Scully?" 

He shone the light around. Scattered clothing. An open shaft. And
then, in a corner, Scully lying motionless on the ground. 

"Scully?" He ran over to her, kneeling down and shaking her
shoulder. She shivered, pushing herself up weakly. Mulder touched
her cheek gently and she flinched. There was a thin trickle of
blood at the corner of her mouth and he wiped it away with his
thumb. 

"Are you okay?" 

Scully gave a mute nod. 

"Antonelli?" 

"He fell," Scully took a shuddering breath. "And Bob, oh god, he
fell too." 

"Bob?" Mulder stood, shining the flashlight down the shaft. 

Lewis peered into the dark maw with him, letting out a low whistle.
"I don't think we're going to find them alive. How deep does this
one go?" 

Mulder shook his head, turning back to Scully, who was struggling
to her feet. "Here," he reached to help her but she waved him off,
wobbling just a little. 

"I'm okay. I just want to go home." 

***** 

Friday, October 16 
A.D. Kersh's Office 
4:23 p.m. 

"Perhaps I should have noted that I wished to see you return
unscathed as well, Agent Scully?" Kersh gave a disapproving frown
as he took in her bruised appearance. 

"Yes sir," Scully looked him straight in the eye. Mulder's eyes
flickered over to Scully before returning to Kersh. 

"Suppose you sum it up for me, Agent Mulder." Kersh glanced at his
watch. "Make it fast." 

"Among the personal effects sent to Adelaide Harrington after
Collins' execution was a journal. In the summer of 1972 Antonelli
set off a dynamite charge in the mine that killed their friend
Robert Elliott. Fearing repercussions if it was discovered they had
been playing with explosives, Collins was coerced by Antonelli into
never revealing that they were responsible." 

Mulder glanced over at Scully again before continuing. "As they
grew older the secret began to eat away at both of them in
different ways. After he was convicted of murder, Collins began to
look for ways to make Antonelli pay. He blamed Antonelli for the
way his life had turned out." 

Kersh took off his glasses and began cleaning them slowly. "You
expect me to believe that Collins had his revenge from beyond the
grave after all?" he spoke without looking up. 

Scully cleared her throat. "No sir. We believe that Collins
persuaded Antonelli that killing those women would be the ultimate
mind game, hoping that Antonelli would be caught and punished." 

Kersh put his glasses back on. "And so an officer with an excellent
record decided to just start killing people because a childhood
friend wanted to play a sick joke?" 

"Not so excellent a record," Mulder said. "After being passed over
for a promotion in 1991 Antonelli believed that he was looked on
with suspicion for not suspecting Collins sooner in 1989. The truth
was that he became volatile after Collins went to prison. Acting
out on his fear and guilt he had severeal altercations with Huitt
and his fellow officers. He also had run-ins with both Penny Wyman
and the District Attorney over other cases. When Collins approached
him he saw it as a way to wreak his own vengeance." 

"And his fiance?" Kersh asked. "Agent Scully, did he also take her
into the mine?" 

"We believe she wandered in there on her own, sir." 

Kersh looked at the report on his desk, his eyebrows raising. "In
her pajamas? After a winter storm that left several inches of
snow?" 

Mulder gave a resigned sigh, causing Kersh to glance at him
briefly. Scully's lips thinned as she wondered just whose version
of events Kersh was willing to believe. "Yes sir." 

"Agent Mulder, I assume you have a differing opinion?" 

"Rachel was lured into the mine by Bob Elliott..." Mulder began. 

"The friend who died in the mine?" Kersh sat back, unimpressed. 

"Yes," Mulder gave a decisive nod. 

"He wasn't killed?" 

"He was." 

Kersh leaned forward, turning his attention to Scully. "Agent
Scully?" 

Scully took a deep breath as she considered her words. "There was a
boy in the mine. He confronted Antonelli," she paused and Kersh
raised a questioning eyebrow. "He... he did bear a resemblance to
the boy in the photograph. But I was disoriented at the time." 

Mulder stood up straighter, opening his mouth to speak. Kersh held
up a hand to forestall him. 

"What happened to the boy?" 

Scully's gaze flickered over the open report in front of Kersh. It
was all in there. Surely he had read the report, why then was he
making her reiterate it? Mulder gave a soft sigh of impatience. 

"Antonelli and the boy..." 

"Bob," Mulder murmured. 

"Bob," she conceded. "Bob followed us into the mine, making threats
before apparently turning back. Antonelli was very agitated. He was
making accusations against Agent Mulder, Sheriff Huitt and even
Randall Collins. He took me to the same location where he had
killed Karen Huitt and the other women. Bob returned and the two of
them struggled, coming very close to the edge of a shaft." 

"I'm getting the impression that this child put up more of a fight
than you did." Kersh said blandly. 

Scully stood up straighter. " As I stated earlier, I was very dizzy
and disoriented. But he did seem to have an advantage over
Antonelli." 

"How so?" 

"Antonelli also appeared to be frightened of Bob, he would swing at
him, but he was still keeping his distance. At least that's the way
it looked, but you should note that it was dark and I was
incapacitated. Bob had dropped his flashlight and the only light to
go by was from the one Antonelli was waving around." 

"Go on," Kersh gave a nod. 

"When they reached the edge of the shaft it appeared that Bob
pushed Antonelli, who then pulled Bob with him. Shortly after that
Agent Mulder and Lewis Scully arrived." 

Kersh steepled his hands. "Neither body has been recovered?" 

"No sir. That shaft bottoms out at 2900 feet, but with over 800
feet of water it's considered far too cold and cramped to risk
sending in divers. Hopefully they will be caught by the same
current that brought Rachel's body to the surface." 

Kersh was silent, staring at the wall behind them thoughtfully.
After a few seconds he gave them a curt nod and a dismissive wave.
"That will be all, Agents." He shut the file on his desk. "Have a
good day." 

They both left the office. Once they were in the hall Mulder let
out an exasperated sigh. "I was incapacitated?" 

Scully's chin snapped up, "What are you implying?" 

Mulder shrugged. "Nothing." 

Scully turned away, ignoring Mulder's dissatisfied look. 

***** 

Friday, October 16 
Mulder's Apartment 
7:48 p.m. 

Mulder sat on his couch, eyes closed, debating the merits of
accepting the Lone Gunmen's invitation to join them for an evening
of hacking into the White House home page to plant Easter eggs. He
turned his head, eyes still closed, when he heard the soft shuffle
of familiar footsteps in front of his door. 

After a long pause there was a loud knock. Mulder opened the door
to reveal Scully standing in his hall with her hands behind her
back and a solemn expression on her face. "I brought you a belated
birthday gift." 

"Why Agent Scully," Mulder leaned out to look over her shoulder,
causing her to take half a step back. "What did you bring me?" 

"May I come in?" 

"Certainly." Mulder stepped aside, allowing her entrance. He shut
the door, turning to find Scully holding a box out to him. Mulder
took it, giving it a shake and hearing a rattle inside. "Hmmm." He
shook it again. "Whatever it is, it's not what I was expecting." 

Scully flushed but didn't look away. "Just open it already." 

Mulder tore off the wrapping paper, revealing a shoebox. He lifted
the lid and his eyes went wide with wonder. He gave Scully a small
smile as he pulled out a rusted flashlight. "Bob's flashlight," he
said softly. 

Scully looked at the flashlight for moment before she met his gaze.
"It's rusted solid, Mulder. The batteries in it have been dead for
years. But... I thought that you might appreciate it." 

"I'm not Kersh, don't hedge with me. For my birthday, Scully, be
honest. Bob was the boy in the picture, you saw him. This
flashlight worked perfectly." 

Scully looked down, giving her head a slight shake. "After the
dreams I kept having, and Adelaide's stories, it's entirely
possible that it was all just a hallucination of some kind." 

"What about Antonelli? Was he hallucinating too? What about me?
What about Lewis? We could hear all three of you in the mine." 

Scully shrugged, lifting her hands helplessly. 

"Hey," Mulder sat down on his couch, patting the cushion next to
him. "I'm not asking you to change your beliefs, Scully. I just
want to hear what happened. Regardless of how it sounds." 

Scully wavered for a moment and then sat down, turning to face
Mulder. "I don't really know what happened, Mulder. Like I said, it
was dark and I was disoriented. If you ask me whether the boy in
the mine could be the same boy in that photograph I would have to
admit that the resemblance is quite striking." 

Mulder said nothing, turning the flashlight over in his hands while
he waited for her to continue. 

"He, Bob, he said something that struck me as odd. I don't know how
he could have 'called' Rachel into the mine but he as much as
admitted to me that he had seen Karen and the other women in there.
When I asked him to help me find a way out and he told me that the
door I had found earlier wouldn't open. He said that he told 'the
others' that but they didn't believe him. He also implied that
hiding from Antonelli in the mine was a game to him." 

Mulder tilted his head, encouraging her to continue. Scully shifted
on the couch, facing forward as she voiced aloud a story she still
didn't quite believe. 

"When Antonelli came into the mine, Bob pulled me into an alcove,
trying to hide us both. Antonelli knew that I'd be there, it was so
strange. And Bob just...," Scully paused, shaking her head. "It was
like he just disappeared." 

Scully leaned forward, resting her elbows on her knees as she toyed
with her keys on the surface of his coffee table. "He crawled away,
Mulder. Maybe he was going to get help but came back when he saw
Antonelli choking me." 

"Then how do you account for Antonelli's reaction to him?" 

Scully said nothing, her gaze fixed on the table in front of her. 

"Was Bob the boy in your dreams?" Mulder set the flashlight down on
the coffee table. 

Scully sat back, crossing her arms protectively. "I told you
before, I never actually saw the boy in those dreams, I just sensed
him. Almost like I was him." 

"I think he was, Scully. I think you had a link with him somehow. I
think all of Antonelli's victims did, that somehow Bob tried to
warn them or tried to help them. I think Bob played out that game
of hiding from Antonelli each time, until he finally got the
courage to confront him." 

"Mulder, that isn't possible." 

"There are more things in heaven and earth..." 

"Than are dreamt of in your philosophy." Scully finished for him.
"I can't imagine that there are many possibilities out there that
you haven't dreamed of Mulder." 

Mulder shrugged. "I'm sure there are quite a few I haven't
entertained yet. I'd go through them faster if you didn't
constantly demand empirical evidence." 

Scully was silent, a distant look on her face. 

"Hey," Mulder nudged her knee with his. "I'm not saying that having
proof is a bad thing. I've told you before that I need you to keep
me honest." 

Scully frowned, smoothing her fingers across her knees. 

"You nervous, Scully?" 

She gave him a shake of her head. "No, of course not. Why would I
be nervous?" 

Mulder took her hand, squeezing her fingers. "I was wondering the
same thing. After all, you only dropped by to give me a belated
birthday present, right?" 

"Mulder," Scully licked the corner of her mouth as she shifted to
face him. 

"I love it when you do that," Mulder's voice had dropped in
register. Anticipation fluttered through Scully's stomach. She
looked up to see his dark eyes watching her lips. Without meaning
to she gave her lips another nervous lick. Mulder's lips parted and
lethargy washed over Scully, dissolving her intention of leaving. 

Mulder leaned closer until they were nearly touching. Scully's eyes
closed, her upper body swaying to close the distance between them.
His lips brushed across hers, sending a wave of heat to melt the
tension in her shoulders. 

"That's one," he whispered. His fingers traced the bruises left by
Antonelli. Then he bent to kiss the hollow of her throat. "Two," he
said softly. "Or do I still get unlimited kisses for my birthday?" 

Scully's breath caught in her lungs as her heart lurched in her
chest. She stood abruptly, her eyes apologetic. "I don't think I'm
ready for this." 

Mulder stood up too. "You're leaving?" 

She reached out, touching his wrist briefly in apology. "I still
have some errands to run. I'll see you on Monday. Have a good
weekend, Mulder." 

Mulder watched as she walked to the door. "You'll be back!" he
called out. She left, shutting the door behind her with a soft
click. Mulder sat down, propping his feet up on the coffee table,
and smiled to himself. "She'll be back." 

He listened to the soft hiss from his radiator. There was a muted
thud above him as his neighbor shut a door. The fish tank burbbled
in the corner. He waited, his ears straining for the sound he was
certain would be coming. His smile widened at the unmistakable
rattle of his front door. 

***** 

End 14/15 



=====
********
"If I sit long enough it just comes to me."
Phillip Padgett, 'Milagro'

Is your mouse flabby and listless?  Come work it out here   http://alanna.net/sue

********

From: Suzanne Schramm <sister_suze@yahoo.com>

Queen's Gambit 15/15
See part 1 for disclaimer, etc.

According to Susanne (who acts as my own personal Hayes Commission)
this section gets the stronger NC-17 rating.  If you're underage
I'll spoil it for you.  Scully comes back.  They talk and maybe
they even grope a little.  At least, something happens to change
the rating.  You've been warned.

*****
Friday, October 16
Mulder's Apartment
8:03 p.m.

"Mulder," Scully left the door open behind her.  "If you knew I
left my keys behind, why didn't you just say so?"

Mulder shrugged.  "This way seemed a little more satisfying."

Scully flashed him a look as she lifted her keys from where she had
left them on the coffee table.   

"Are we ever going to talk about this?" Mulder asked softly after
she turned to leave again.

Scully froze.  There was no point in asking what he meant. 

"It doesn't have to be tonight.  But I would like to have that
discussion, whenever you're ready."

She still didn't move to leave.  Mulder watched her shoulders tense
as she stood up straighter.  The night in Morgantown flashed
through his memory, the way he had stopped her at the door. 
Tonight, if she stayed, it would have to be her choice, not his.

"What changed, Scully?  Did nearly getting killed convince you that
you'd be better off alone?"

Scully shook her head.  "It's not that, Mulder."

"Tell me."

Scully took a deep breath, letting it out slowly as her mind raced.
 "Nothing has changed, Mulder."   She looked at his open door, torn
between staying and leaving.  Her eyes closed, wishing they were
past this moment, that time would speed up and they had already
finished this conversation.  Couldn't he see that it was better to
leave things as they were?  They couldn't allow things to change,
it could only complicate their quest.

"Then you'd better go," Mulder's voice shook ever so slightly on
the last word.  Sorrow shot through her, this was how they had been
after Morgantown.  Did she really want them to become courteous
strangers again?  Scully realized that they had already changed.
Tonight was just another change, one way or the other.  She reached
out and pushed the door shut, her heart hammering painfully in her
chest. 

Scully turned around, her eyes seeking out Mulder's, wanting
reassurance that this was the right direction.  His eyes were calm,
hopeful even, so she gave voice to her fear.  "Becoming lovers
won't fix anything."

Lovers.  Mulder's head was pounding, completely out of synch with
the slow and uneven beat of his heart.  "What is it that you think
needs fixing, Scully?"

"Mulder, you've accused me before of taking a disagreement with you
personally.  If we take this to the next level, how are we going to
differentiate between work and...."

Mulder stood up, ready to disagree, but Scully continued speaking.

"Let me finish.  You said in Park City that you felt my leaving the
X-Files was the same thing as leaving you."

"I told you that your leaving the X-Files was the same as leaving
me, that's true.  You then explained the subtleties of that action
so I won't make that mistake again.  Your coming here tonight
obviously isn't part of your job description."

"Mulder...."

"We already know that we can work together after the fact.  No
matter how much we pretend otherwise, that line has been erased. 
We can't go back to how things were before Morgantown, Scully.  We
can go back to how they were afterwards.  But I can't ignore what
Morgantown meant to me."

Scully took a quick breath and her hand trembled, rattling the keys
she was clutching.  Mulder walked slowly towards her as he spoke,
his voice dropping.  "I would never do anything to jeopardize our
working relationship, Scully.  What we have is more than just a
working relationship.  We have the foundation that people spend a
lifetime building."

"I don't want to go back," Scully admitted in a whisper.  "I'm just
not sure how to go forward."

"It's easy," Mulder touched her fingers and she released her keys
into his hand.  "You just stay.  The rest we make up as we go
along." 

"Just stay," Scully repeated, unsure if she was agreeing or giving
herself a pep talk.

"Just stay," Mulder confirmed.  Scully closed her eyes as a flush
of arousal swept through her abdomen and then spread across her
cheeks.  Mulder laid one cool palm against her face and she closed
her eyes.

"And we'll talk?"  Scully murmured.

"Yes," Mulder dropped his hand from her cheek.  Scully looked up at
him.  His eyes were dark - dilated from the poor lighting, she
wondered.  Or something else?  A pleasant flutter started in her
stomach at the thought of where talking might lead.  She stepped
around him, returning to sit in the middle of the couch.  Mulder
followed, seating himself in the corner to give her space.

"Mulder, about what happened in Morgantown," she paused, bowing her
head as she thought.  "It was unexpected.  I believe that if we had
talked about it first, it would never have happened."

"Are you sorry that it did?"

Scully started to ask him if he regretted it, but then stopped. 
She already knew the answer to that question. "We can't go back and
change it, Mulder.  It happened.  And now that it has, no, I'm not
sorry."

Mulder gave a slight nod.  "But you're not entirely convinced that
it's a mistake worth repeating?"

"I think 'mistake' is a little harsh.  I'm questioning where we go
from here, how much we want to complicate matters."

"Complicate what, exactly?"

"Mulder, my commitment to the X-Files is a separate entity from my
feelings for you.  Last summer when they took everything away from
us, I quit so I could stay in D.C.  Don't you remember all those
years ago when they shut us down?  We still kept working, just
covertly.  I wanted to stay here and keep working."

"With me?"

"I can't imagine working with anyone else on the X-Files.  But if
it came down to a question of having to choose between you or the
X-Files..." Scully stopped speaking, a faint anxious line appearing
between her eyebrows.

"Are you afraid that if they shut us down again you'd be staying
for different reasons?" Mulder prompted.

"No, that's exactly what I'm *not* saying.  That's what becomes
complicated.  I would stay because the X-Files are important to me,
not because we're romantically involved.  If you had to choose
between me or the X-Files, which would you pick?"

Mulder gaped at her, unwilling to entertain ever having to make
that choice.

"You'd choose the X-Files," Scully answered for him after a short
pause.  "I'd be disappointed in you if you didn't."

Mulder shook his head, letting out a soft chuckle.  "I've always
known you were dedicated, Scully.  But it's touching to know that
even if you can't believe in the X-Files,  you'd toss me aside for
them."  Seeing her frown he touched her wrist and added, "It's one
of your better qualities."

"I'd toss you aside because you're a real pain in the ass."  Scully
smiled to show him she was only half-kidding.

"I know, it's one of my better qualities."  

"That's not entirely true."  Scully sat back on the couch, her
smile turning into a mischievous lilt at the corners of her mouth.

Mulder inched closer until his hand rested near her knee.  "You
wanna tell me about my better qualities?"

"That might require some thought," Scully cautioned.

"I'm not going anywhere."  Mulder poked her knee with one finger. 
"Take your time."

"You have an amazing capacity for belief," Scully glanced at the
flashlight lying on his coffee table.  "I often wonder what,
besides organized religion, you don't believe in."

Mulder grimaced.  "I was hoping you'd tell me how brilliant I am. 
How I've broadened your horizons, enriched your life, opened your
mind.  Or, at the very least, you could say I was 'devastatingly
handsome'."

Scully cocked an eyebrow.  "Devastatingly handsome?" she repeated
skeptically.  "Someone certainly has a high opinion of himself. 
Mulder, if you were devastatingly handsome I would never have been
able to work with you."

"Too much of a distraction?" he teased.

"Too much of an ego.  You have an ego, don't get me wrong.  In
fact, sometimes you are downright frustrating..."

"Frustrating?" Mulder interrupted.  "You think I'm frustrating? You
can be just as frustrating."  His hand cupped her knee, giving it a
playful shake. 

For a split-second Scully felt her temper rise - *she* was
frustrating?  Then she recognized the tease in his touch and his
eyes for what it was.  "In what way do I frustrate you?" she asked
quietly.

Mulder blinked.  He had realized at the same moment she did that
they were moving into potentially volatile territory.  He felt a
pang of regret at telling her she was frustrating.  It was the
truth, certainly, but he feared it had been the wrong thing to say.


"You're a constant source of frustration,  Scully."  Mulder leaned
closer to her, near enough that she could feel the puff of air from
his words.  The weight of his hand on her knee had her wishing he
would touch her or do something besides just leave it resting
there.  

"Give me an example," she challenged him.

"Just one?" Mulder squeezed her knee.  "Because I could probably go
on all night."

"Limit yourself to one within the last few months."

"Okay then," Mulder stroked his thumb lightly over the inside of
her knee, watching with delight as her eyes darkened.  "Reneging on
a promise."  

"What promise?"   With Mulder so close the memories of Morgantown
that she had so assiduously suppressed were nearly overwhelming.  
She could recall with perfect clarity the sensation of Mulder
shuddering towards climax above and inside her.

"As much as I love the flashlight, it's not what I had my heart set
on."  Their eyes met, neither of them looking away until Mulder
leaned in to brush his lips softly over hers.  Scully closed her
eyes then, taking a slow deep breath that did little to steady her.
 

"What?" she whispered.  "What did you have your heart set on?"

"Finishing what we started." He kissed her again, his lips moving
slowly against hers in gentle exploration until she opened her
mouth to deepen the kiss.  Mulder reluctantly pulled away, his
thumb briefly caressing her bottom lip.  "I know it wasn't
technically a promise," he said.  "But it sure was frustrating."  
He took his hand from her knee, its loss increased the ache
building inside her.

"There are other ways to frustrate you," Scully decided it was time
to tease him back a little.  She reached out and let her hand rest
just above his knee.

Mulder glanced down, giving a contemplative look to her hand on his
leg   "This could very well alter my views on religion.".

"Try very hard not to annoy me," Scully cautioned.

"Scully," Mulder stroked his hand up her leg until it came to rest
low on her hip.  "Are you saying I annoy *and* frustrate you?"

"Shut up, Mulder."  This time he didn't move away when she deepened
their kiss.  Instead he pulled her closer, tightening his arms
around her until her breasts were pressed against his chest.  He
remembered all too well how they fit in his hands, how sensitive
her nipples had been, and the sounds she had made when he touched
her.  

Scully broke the kiss this time, leaning her head back to gulp in
air.  Mulder's eyes were drawn to watching the simple act of her
breathing.  The top button on her shirt was undone, exposing a
glimpse of skin and he couldn't resist giving it a kiss.  He kept
his lips there, closing his eyes to savor the smell and feel of
Scully.  His tongue darted out and he gave a soft moan at the taste
of her skin, sending a thrill through them both.  

This was nothing like she remembered, Scully realized.  How could
she have forgotten the urgent heat of his mouth?  Her hand smoothed
over the back of his head, pulling him closer, but Mulder resisted.
 They both watched as Mulder counted off the buttons on her shirt,
his finger tapping each one to where they ended just below her
navel.

"It was a promise, Mulder," Scully whispered.  He looked up from
the hem of her shirt and she gave him a shy smile.  "Aren't you
going to unwrap your present?"

"Is there any kind of exchange policy I should be aware of first?"
Mulder slipped the bottom button free.

"No returns allowed," Scully told him.  "You open it, you keep it."

"Fair enough."  A second and then a third button were loosened. 
Despite the rapid beat of her heart Scully felt herself sinking
into lassitude as Mulder finished unbuttoning her shirt and opened
it to his view.   He gave her bra a delighted smile.  "Why Agent
Scully, however do you run in this?"  He traced the flimsy strap on
her left shoulder.

Scully smiled back at him.  He knew damn well this wasn't an
everyday bra, and certainly guessed why she would have chosen to
wear it tonight.  Mulder's hand cradled her breast, his thumb
sliding over the tightly drawn nipple outlined beneath the opaque
black fabric.

"Happy birthday to me," Mulder murmured, giving her a soft kiss on
the lips.  "It's just what I always wanted."  

"Is it?"  Scully nipped at his chin, enjoying the sensation of
stubble rasping against her lips.

"God, yes.  Let's see how it fits."  Mulder pulled her onto his lap
but this time Scully was the one who resisted.  She stood up,
shrugging to get rid of her blazer and shirt.  Mulder caught on
quickly, standing up to shed his t-shirt.  They both hurriedly
removed pants and shoes and socks.  Mulder was faster, stripping to
his boxers before she could finish kicking away her pantyhose.   As
Scully pulled her ankle free Mulder looked down, catching sight of
Bob's flashlight on the coffee table.

It was a start, he told himself.  It was a damn good start.   Not
only was she willing to take him on as more than a working partner,
as evidenced by the pile of clothing on his floor, but she was also
open to the *possibility* of extreme possibilities.  With Scully,
that was definitely a start.

When Scully stood back up she found Mulder watching her with a wry
grin.

"What?" she asked, feeling suddenly self-conscious.

Mulder shook his head, pulling her into a hug.  She put her arms
around him, her cheek resting against his bare skin as his hands
slowly stroked up and down her back.  It should have been sexual,
Scully thought, standing there in their underwear with Mulder's
erection prodding her belly.  But somehow, it wasn't.

"Scully," he murmured into her hair.  "I just want you to know now,
before anything else happens, that you've already given me the best
birthday present.  The rest is just frosting."   He cradled her
head in his hands, smiling gently down at her.  

Scully looked up at him, wishing that she could see his eyes
better.  "Mulder, are you saying that sex with me is like
frosting?"

"Not as sticky, but certainly as sweet and addictive."  Mulder
kissed her forehead.  "Giving me the flashlight was enough."

"Mulder, the flashlight was the frosting."

Mulder kissed her, his mind swimming with the realization that she
was right.  In Morgantown he had made love to her out of
desperation, seeking for a connection between them.  He had wanted
a way to make her believe in him without realizing that she always
had.  She might not believe in his theories, but she had always
believed in him.  

He kissed her deeply, overwhelmed with emotion.  Without words he
used his mouth and tongue to tell her how much he loved her and
needed her.  Scully kissed him back with the same urgency,
surprised herself by how fiercely she needed him.  It wasn't the
sex, it was Mulder himself she desired.  She had always craved a
challenge and he was constantly providing one.  It was why she
hadn't stopped him in Morgantown and why she had come back tonight.
 She was wrong - the sex was the frosting.  Everything else between
them, whether work or friendship, was what really counted.  She
wanted to tell him that but telling him would mean she'd have to
stop kissing him and there was no way in hell she could do that.

Minutes later when Mulder dropped to his knees before her, she
tried to remember what it was she was going to tell him.  Something
important, if only he wasn't kissing her stomach while his hands
rose up her back to unhook her bra.  He pulled her down so that she
was sitting on the couch and slid her bra off.  Leaning in he took
one nipple into his mouth, elongating it with his tongue so that
Scully shuddered against him.

"I was wrong," she gasped.

"Mmmm."  He supported her breast with one hand so that he could tap
his tongue lightly against the sensitive nub.  

"This is the frosting."  She let out a small groan as he gave the
second breast the same treatment.  Her fingers tightened in his
hair.

As his mouth flexed on her breast Mulder tried to follow her logic
but she was employing his own circular approach.  He couldn't make
sense of it when all the blood in his body was heading in the wrong
direction for an argument with Scully.

Mulder lifted her instead, sliding her back along the couch so that
he could lie down with her.  She gave a small gasp as her bare back
met up with cool leather and arched up against him.  Mulder bit her
shoulder softly, groaning his pleasure at the way she had shifted
against his cock.  Bracing himself on one arm, he used the other
hand to tug at her panties. 

Take it slow, he told himself.  Morgantown had happened so fast,
this time he was going to make it last for her.  His head lowered
to tease one nipple while he divested her of that one last bit of
clothing. 

Scully moved her legs so Mulder could settle more solidly against
her.  The cotton of his boxers did little to assuage the flood of
moisture he had caused.  He shifted slowly, letting the fabric and
the heated ridge of his erection stroke over the cleft between her
legs until she felt nearly frantic to get him naked.  His mouth
continued to tug on her breast, sending spikes of pleasure down her
spine to meet up with the thrills generated by the caresses his
hand was making across the back of her thigh.

Her hands pulled at the waistband of his boxers but Mulder didn't
rise up enough to be able to slide them off.  Scully tugged again
and Mulder stopped moving, his erection pressing directly against
her clit.   She shifted, desperate for the release that was so
close.  She groaned his name, her hands clutching at his lower
back.  Mulder's tongue circled her nipple one last time before he
raised his head.   "Yeah?" his voice was a ragged whisper.

"Please," her eyes were squeezed shut, her lips parted as she
gasped for breath.  Mulder was sure he had never seen anything as
intoxicating.  "Mulder, you're frustrating me." 

"You said it was one of my better qualities."  He bent to take her
other nipple into his mouth but she shook her head vigorously.  

"No.  Show me another."  Her hands pulled at his boxers again.  "I
know you have diverse talents, Mulder.  You've competently
demonstrated frustrating.  Let's move on."

"Whose birthday is this?"  But he shifted anyway and the two of
them worked his boxers off.   The couch squeaked beneath them as he
settled between her legs again.  Mulder tried to lean on one arm,
using his other hand to guide himself towards her but he lost his
balance, his bare damp skin sticking to the back of the couch when
he fell against it.

"You're doing that on purpose." Scully laughed, pushing on his
chest.  "Sit up."

Mulder sat up as Scully untangled her legs from around him.  She
kneeled on the couch next to him, giving him another light push. 
"We'll switch places," she told him, arching up so that he could
lie down.  She straddled his thighs, bracing herself with one hand
on the back of the couch.  She took him in her other hand, stroking
softly along the length of him until he thrust into her hand.  Her
fingers tightened and he hissed in gratification.

His eyes were closed but he opened them as soon as he felt the wet
heat of her begin to envelope him.  He watched, every nerve in his
body screamingly aware, as she slid down his cock until he could
feel the pressure of her cervix against the tip of him.  Her inner
muscles quivered against him as she rose a few inches and then
settled again.

Scully looked down at him, now physically as much as part of her as
he had been spiritually for years.  Their eyes met and held as she
began to lift and dip, taking him in a little deeper as her body
adjusted.  Mulder's hips began to thrust up slowly each time she
retreated, sending a wave of heat through her.  Not only did he
prolong the fullness of complete penetration when he lifted, she
could swear he also was brushing against every pleasurable nerve
she had.

Groaning, she tried to lift a little higher, bracing her hands
against his chest for leverage.  That slight change in position
sent another, stronger wave crashing through her.  Mulder held her
hips, smoothly gliding into her even further than he had before. 
She shuddered, increasing her pace as she tried to catch up with
the glittering promise of release she could feel closing in on her.
 She closed her eyes in concentration until the rise and fall of
her body against his was the only sensation in the world.  When
Mulder's thumb circled her clit she cried out, trembling as her
body leapt in pleasure.  

Mulder let out his own hoarse cry as Scully's vaginal muscles held
him fast.  Her pace slowed as she fought for control.  When she
found it again she quickened her movements.  Mulder felt nearly
frantic, he was so close and it felt so incredibly good and he was
sure that if it weren't for the way the couch was sweating beneath
his ass, or maybe it was him that was sweating, but it didn't
matter, and if she would only come down hard on him again, like, oh
god, like that, then he was sure that he would and then she did it
again and he let out a wail as a long rising pulse broke loose from
deep inside him and the world went up in a flare of electric blues
and yellows and the only thing that mattered was that she was here
and that was the frosting on the cake and it tasted even better
than he remembered.

His last conscious thoughts were to wonder if he would be stuck to
the couch forever.  But Scully was spooned in front of him, tucking
the blanket from the back of the couch around them and he realized
that he would be quite content to be a permanent part of the
furniture if Scully could be there too.  He mumbled his thanks,
patting her hip as she settled more heavily against him.

*****

It was the kind of darkness the eyes never grow accustomed to.  He
wondered if it was the kind of darkness they never recover from
either.  How long had he been here?  Trapped somewhere between
death and life, clinging to wooden beams that only revealed their
existence after an excrutiating search.  He pressed on blindly,
feeling for the beam above until it materialized.  He pulled
himself up, cursing when his grip faltered, stealing precious
inches from his escape.  His muscles shook and protested but he
didn't stop.  Grim determination drove him.  

Determination and the vow that vengeance would yet be his.  He
lifted his hand once more, straining towards salvation.

*****

End 15/15

Whew!  Finished!  If you have comments, critiques or no one else to
talk to, write me at sister_suze@yahoo.com

Roll credits...

I just want to take up a few more minutes of your time to thank all
the people who stood behind me during the writing of this fic. 
Actually, "thanks" doesn't even come close to what I want to say to
all the wonderful people involved.  

It's a very tall order to save me from myself, but my betas all did
this effortlessly.  Any mistakes you see are my own.  Thank you to
all of them - Susanne, Sharon, Laney and M for all the time and
effort they freely put into reading for me.

I also want to express my deepest gratitude to everyone who took
the time to send me feedback while this was a WIP on my page.  I'd
still be staring at part 7 if wasn't for your encouragement.

Park City is a real place, as are the majority of the locales in
this story.  (Snaps to Barb who knew the name of the grocery store
Karen disappeared from.)  The history given for Park City and the
Ontario mine are real.  I was informed recently that you can no
longer take a tour through the Ontario (which is a shame, since
that tour gave me the idea for this story in the first place).  

Susanne - I wouldn't have finished this story, hell, wouldn't even
still be writing if it weren't for you.  Time and again you poured
over this story with me, never complaining even after reading the
same part multiple times.  You are my cheerleader, my sounding
board, my swift kick in the ass and everything I want to be when I
grow up.







=====
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"If I sit long enough it just comes to me."
Phillip Padgett, 'Milagro'

Is your mouse flabby and listless?  Come work it out here   http://alanna.net/sue

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