From: "Theresa Filardo" <theresa@xf-mindseye.simplenet.com>
Date: Mon, 23 Oct 2000 23:50:01 -0400
Subject: xfc: New: Reaching From The Stars (1/2)
Source: xfc


Title: Reaching From The Stars (1/2)

Author: Theresa F.

Rating: R

Category: A, Skinner Torture, Skinner/Scully friendship, Skinner POV, tiny
bit of MSR.

Spoilers: SR 819, FTF, En Ami, Requiem

Summary: Skinner is experiencing the effects of the nano-technology in his
body. Scully comes over to help him through the agony. They share and
discover secrets that reveal the cause of Skinner's situation, and of
Scully's mysterious pregnancy.

Disclaimer: All characters and references to the X-Files belong to Chris
Carter, 1013 Productions and Fox. No copyright infringement is intended. I'm
just using them for fun.

Feedback: theresa@xf-mindseye.simplenet.com


*

... one hundred twenty-two, one hundred twenty-three, one hundred
twenty-four...

I don't care how many times I've been told counting can bring down your
temper, I'd hit the point of no return once I reached one hundred.  Then I
realized I was counting the holes in the ceiling tile above me as I lay on
my deceivingly plush couch.

A noise, sounding like the Emergency Broadcast System tone, that had been
slicing through my brain had finally subsided only moments ago. Now I just
lie here, sweating my ass off, in pain, a pain that can't be cured with
Advil or Tylenol -- hell, even extra strength Codeine isn't going to help me
now. Pushing in the face of one Alex Krycek, now that might do something to
ease the agony I'm going through. I smile at the thought of a busted
Krycek-cranium.

Aaaaarrrrrgggggggg!

A shooting pain travels rapidly from the base of my neck down through every
nerve ending in my body, shocking my heart into skipping a beat. Tiny
spider-like tingles wash over my skin in waves. I can imagine my own skin
peeling back from the muscles, bloody flakes dispersing into the air, as the
fiery sensation rips through me once again. I almost wish I could tear my
skin off. Maybe these damned nanotechs would finally expel themselves from
me.

I glance at the blurry digital numbers on the VCR's clock. Scully should
have been here by now. I hated calling her so early in the morning but .

Goddammit that hurts! Aahh, Not again! I clutch the cushions of the couch,
bracing myself against the next wave of torture. The veins on my arms are
already beginning to show their purple rivers through my skin. I hope it
doesn't go any further.

Deep breaths. Deep, slow breaths, Walter. You've got to pull yourself
together before she gets here. There's little she can do and you know it.
That's right. Pain fading. Slow, deep, breaths. One, two, three, four...

Like I said, Scully is the last person I would want to get involved in my
problems. She's got enough to worry about with Mulder missing and her baby
to think of. What a damned predicament that was. Why did she trust me with
that secret? Probably the same reason I trust her with mine. She's the only
other person, on earth that is, who knows or even believes about my
vulnerability with these micro-machines in me. It has been a while since
anything happened. I thought Krycek had given up. Apparently not.

The pain's subsiding some. Now I only feel the remnants of the throbbing in
my bloodstream. It scares me like hell to know that I don't have control
over my own body. I shiver with the thought of my last experience, so close
to death. I don't know if I saw a light and a long tunnel leading to
salvation, like all the near-death stories I always heard from Mulder. I
don't even know if I believe in that stuff.

I don't know what I believe anymore.

The arm cushion of my couch is now soaked with sweat. It's becoming
uncomfortable under my neck, abrasive from the sensitivity of my heated
skin, and rough from the dampness of the thick material. I rise slowly to a
sitting position, preparing myself for a walk to the bathroom for a clean
towel. That's when the doorbell rings. Scully.

I hobble towards the door, fighting to keep the room from rotating sideways.
I stretch my arms out in an attempt to reach out to one of the walls,
pushing at it, trying to keep it from falling on top of me. Too late. I lose
my balance, and my knees crash down to the solid floor. The room is suddenly
stable again, but now my head is spinning.

I hear the far away, high-pitched tone threatening to invade the space
around my eardrums again. I slap my hands onto my forehead; try to stop the
pressure, the noise, the throbbing in my eyes. I wipe the glasses from my
face and press at my eyelids. Got to get control. Got to get it together.
Stop this madness. Stop that sound.

The single clang of the electronic doorbell rings again, watery and weak,
but real and present enough to drown out the tone in my head. I'm close to
the front door. All I have to do is pull myself up enough to reach the
intercom. I place my glasses carefully back onto the bridge of my nose,
afraid any wrong movement will trigger a new and hideous internal reaction.

I look up at the wall beside the door, cool blue in the early morning
dimness. I know the intercom buttons are no more than two feet above my head
from this seated position, but it seems that the wall has inexplicably grown
taller. I feel like Alice in her Wonderland dilemma: too small to reach her
salvation, and ready to drown in her own tears. I want to cry -- want to cry
hard, let the tears fall, big and round and wet. Let it all out. I need
help, but I'll never get it if I don't answer that door.

I bite it back. I bite it back and swallow the salty fear in my throat
because I know I can't let my troubles wash away into a dream world. As
insane as the situation is, it is real, and I have to get up. Now. Get
Scully in here.

I unhinge my buckled legs and force my weight up against the door, clinging
to the doorknob like a crutch. With a heavy finger, I buzz Scully in. No
need to ask who's there. Who else would come to my apartment at 3 a.m. on a
Wednesday?

Shit.

Who else but the asshole that controls the mess of nano-technology inside
me. I begin to panic. What the hell does he want?! What is it this time?
They've got Mulder for God's sake. What do they want with me?

The cowardly thought instantly sickens me. I'd give anything to see Mulder
alive, even if they were to take me as an abductee and imprison me with him.
I don't doubt Krycek had some dirty hand in setting us up for Mulder's
abduction in the first place.

I'm still supporting myself on the doorknob when I hear footsteps in the
hall, but they're not heavy enough to be from a man Krycek's size, nor are
they soft enough to be from a man who is trying to be stealthy. They stop
before my door.

The knock from the other side, although tentative when it comes, is so
excruciatingly loud to my ultra-sensitive ears that I jerk my head hard in
reaction, nearly hitting it against the door.

Deep slow breaths, Walter. It's Scully. Has to be.

I lean my forehead on the door above the peephole and peer through the tiny
lens. I'm relieved to see a shock of red hair pulled back in a ponytail,
away from the pale face of my agent, my friend.

It takes quite a bit of effort to rotate the doorknob, but when I finally
hear the click of the release, the door swings back easily and Scully slips
into the narrow opening like a slick tabby cat.

The sour expression on her face tells me that I must look at least half as
bad as I actually feel. Wasting no time, she pushes herself up underneath my
arm, and supports me as we hobble together back to the couch. I lie back and
try to act like a good patient while Scully gives me the once-over. As she
waves her finger to the left, and then the right, my eyes follow obediently.
When she reaches down to unzip a gym bag full of First Aid supplies, my eyes
follow her precise, slow movements.

She's tired. God, I wish I didn't have to call her. I notice that she is
paler than usual. Her cracked lips are tinged slightly blue and slathered
with Chap Stick. Before she pulls out a stethoscope and some cold packs, she
pops a Wint-O-Green Lifesaver into her mouth; the kind that taste like
Pepto, but don't quite make you wretch like the devilish pink stuff. I must
have just caught her in her newly acquired 3 a.m. morning sickness ritual.

She catches sight of my pity-laden expression and offers me a mint in
consolation. I shake my head carefully in rejection, and she stuffs the roll
of mints back into her pocket. She cracks a cold pack, wraps it in a thin
towel, and lays it upon my brow. I'm almost touched that she remembered my
fevers from the last time.

"Sir. What has happened so far?" Scully asks in her doctor voice, a little
roughened by lack of sleep.

"I ..." I cough against my own raw throat, suddenly aware that I hadn't
spoken to anyone since leaving the Hoover building earlier in the evening.
"I can't believe this is happening again."

"Sir, you have to tell me exactly what you've been going through up until
now. I want to take as many precautionary measures as possible. We've been
through this before ..."

I look at her with a hopeless scowl. There was only one way to stop this.
The only person who could help me was the same one I wanted dead. Fat chance
of us finding the Rat before I had any chance of recovering by "normal"
methods.

She sees the doubt in my eyes and becomes frustrated at the implication of
her incompetence. "I WILL help you, sir."

I sigh in resignation. How can I doubt her? Who else can I turn to? My head
begins throbbing again with too much thought. I close my eyes as Scully
continues to examine me, her breath falling across my nose as she leans over
me, the faint smell of mints and stomach acid tingeing the air. God, that's
giving me a headache. I wonder at how something so faint and insignificant
can make me react so easily.

The pain deepens in my brain. No, that's not a normal reaction. How could it
be? I feel my skull absorb the pain expanding in my head again, and hear the
Emergency Broadcast System tone, growing louder with every breath. It's
consuming my whole awareness, and I feel Scully holding me down, bracing me
against my own convulsions.

"No! Stop!" I shout, and I feel Scully's grip loosen slightly. I grab her
wrist and try to hold down my barking, "No, not you. Hold me down, Scully. I
don't want to hurt y ..." I grit my teeth with the next wave of lightning in
my brain, feeling it starting to travel down the rest of my body as before.
I try to press my face into the cushions before the next one hits. I can't
do it in time. A flash sears through my vision, and then blackness takes
over.

*

Blackness. It flutters away in a swarm of wings and chirping. A flock of
dark sparrows shoot out across a gray sky as one unit, following an
instinctual pattern, looping around and around, until they all settle into
the bare trees surrounding me. Funny. Didn't notice the trees until now.

What is this place? The chirping of the flock continues. I look around me
and feel as if I know this place. The gray sky and bare trees should denote
a cold atmosphere, but I feel warm, familiar, comfortable. The noise of the
flock becomes a quiet background to the endless forest. Birds flit from
branch to branch, but I hear no sounds of trees swaying or dry leaves
dancing in the fall breeze. Only quiet, friendly peeps.

And then there aren't only chirps. Tiny tinkling noises, almost
electronic-sounding, lace themselves within the bird noises, so subtle I
almost miss them. I turn to look for something within the intricate grid
work of the branches above me, but all I see among them are the dots of
sparrows and a gray sky.

My neck aches as I crane my face toward the heavens, hopeful that I might
catch something unnoticed if I don't look away. Then I hear it. It's a small
whisper. It is like a faint heaving of breath grazing down my throat,
searching for an entrance to my soul.

The birds stir. They hear it too. They react quickly, frighteningly fast.
They gather themselves up into a cloud of blackness, and I realize their
intention too late, as they direct themselves all straight down, plummeting
toward me, shrieking their high-pitched cries.

*

A burning, vibrating sensation tears through my esophagus. My ears ring with
it, my hands tremble, and my lungs sting like I have just gone for a
five-mile run.

I am screaming.

It takes a good ten minutes for Scully to calm me down, soothing me with her
even voice, stroking the sweat from my brow with a cool, damp washcloth.

I vaguely realize, as I focus on my surroundings, that the morning sun has
stretched its tendrils of daylight across the floor of my living room. I
welcome the light, especially after that God-awful dream I just experienced.
But as the room grows brighter my eyes become extremely sensitive, the
sunlight piercing my vision like a hot branding iron.

"Your pupils are dilated," Scully remarks, noticing my squinting.

She moves to draw the vertical blinds at my window. I follow her silhouetted
movements as she pulls the cord. She hasn't changed much since learning
about her pregnancy. She certainly isn't showing yet. It's too soon for
that. But she does move a little slower, a little more carefully, and she
bends forward slightly when she walks, as if she were subconsciously
protecting her abdomen from harm.

I smell coffee brewing in my sad excuse for a kitchen and realize I must
have been out cold for a few hours. I sit up on the couch, attempting to
make up for the terrible hosting job I've done for my guest. Rubbing at the
glands in my neck, I try to speak in a volume a little lower than my
previous outburst. Scully comes over and sits beside me.

"Coffee?" It's half an offer, and half a request.

"Are you up to it?" she asks, her eyebrows lifting skeptically with the
question.

I nod. "Want some?" My voice is pathetically scratchy, but I sincerely want
to thank this woman in some fashion for putting up with the bulldog of a
boss that I am.

She smirks and answers, "I've had some already, but I'll join you with half
a cup. Be right back."

She returns in a few minutes carefully balancing two big mugs of the
steaming liquid, and as promised, she only fills hers halfway.

"Thank You," I reply, raising my eyes to her in gratitude.

She nods behind the big mug almost filling her hands completely.

"For everything, I mean. For staying."

She puts her cup down and stares at me, as if she were reading into my
subconscious, trying to find that place I hide, where I hate to show my
vulnerability to anyone. She's seen a glimpse of it, and acknowledges what I
have borne.

"You're welcome," she says simply, and presses her lips together in a
reserved smile.

We sit for a while in the quiet. I'm quite thankful that it is so silent for
a change. The tension in my muscles begins to melt away with every sip I
take of the warm coffee. Fatigue is bearing down on me fast. Despite the
jolt of caffeine, I feel myself succumbing to my drowsiness, and I lie back
again onto the couch. Scully brings me a pillow from the bed, a much better
cushion than the flattened puff of the couch arm.

She takes the opportunity of my reclined position to feel my head for fever,
my glands for swelling and to inspect my chest and forearms for signs of
abnormally raised veins and capillaries.

"How are you feeling," I manage to whisper, fighting to hold off the
drowsiness a little longer.

She glances at me quickly, an almost scolding look that says, 'How could you
possibly worry about me at a time like this?' She begins to pack some used
towels away into the duffle bag as she answers.

"I called the office. I said you'd be out today." She zips up the bag and
sits on the coffee table opposite me. "Don't worry. I spoke to Kim. I said
I'd look after you." She shifts slightly as if the hard surface of the
tabletop isn't a wise choice of seating. I'd normally agree with her, but
that's not why she shifted.

"She um ..." Scully slowly begins, "She was a little terse with me after I
told her that. That I'd look after you." She gives me a strange, inquisitive
look. She wants to gently coax some information from me, but isn't sure if
it's appropriate to ask.

I chuckle softly. "Kim's a little protective of me."

It's not the answer she wants, but she seems to understand. Her response is
far away and fuzzy. I'm drifting to sleep again.

"It gets that way when you work with someone for a while."

"Mm ..." is my only reply. Darkness envelops me again.

*

I see the gray sky again; big, empty and cold this time. The forest of trees
is gone, but I know this is the same place I was before. The flat expanse of
earth goes on forever, unblemished by hill or mountain, clear to the
horizon. Orange, yellow and brown leaves carpet the ground as if my forest
had been plucked up by a giant, the leaves left behind as the only evidence
of the trees ever being there in the first place.

There are no birds this time, thankfully, at least, none that I can see. A
storm is brewing; the dark gray clouds stampede towards me from the horizon.
They gather quickly above me, like a Nature film on fast-forward. I crane my
neck to face the sky, listening for the familiar sound of thunder rumbling
in the thickening atmosphere.

Silence.

Lightning flashes within the charcoal gray puffs in the sky. But there is
something strange about it. Instead of the fiery streaks branching out
randomly, they follow a grid. The white hot lines form paths at uniform
right angles and sharp diagonals.

Then I do hear something -- something as unnatural as the predetermined path
of a lightning bolt. It starts out as the sound of a breeze shifting the
leaves. Subtly, like the sound of a car engine approaching from a long
distance away, the whisper grows. I can feel the vibration of it searching
down my throat again, prodding my insides to find a place to strike.

In my peripheral vision a form, human size, distracts me, but every time I
try to turn and focus on it, it jumps away, still hanging at the very edge
of my sight. I turn and turn, making myself dizzy, trying to chase it down.
I have to know what it is, 'who' it is.

It is then that I hear the whisper grow its loudest and perceive a
recognizable diction.

"Hhhhhhhhhhhh... Ssssskkaaahhh... sssssssssskkaahh.."

It is a tinny, metallic sound, but I can recognize a definite human voice. I
hear the invading whisper twice more as it probes through my brain,
realizing for the first time that it is not from the air around me, but
somewhere deep inside my own head.

A sharp, hissing crack suddenly stops everything; all movement, all sounds.
It is a dead silence in the true sense of the word.

And I feel it.

A presence.

I whip around to see the form that had been lurking at the edge of my field
of vision. She stands about fifteen feet away from me, dressed all in black,
a suit, her hair gently caressed be the silent breeze.

Scully.

But at the same time it is not Scully, more like a memory of her. She stands
before me, unmoving except for her lips.

"Skinner," she says, but not in her own voice. It is coated with the same
silvery sharpness as the mysterious whisper I keep hearing. I blink at the
strangeness of it. In the split second that my eyelids block my view, the
Scully thing moves to stand not more than six inches in front of me,
disturbingly close, eye to eye.

I don't move. I can't. I look at her, watch her eyes turn from a clear blue
to a slightly muddier hazel. Her lashes become shorter and her forehead
protrudes subtly. The red locks that frame her face shrink back into her
skull and turn darker until every hair is almost black.

As I adjust my perspective to take in this intriguing transformation, I
realize just what I'm looking at. It says my name again in a deep, husky
voice, no longer laced with ghostly robotic undertones.

"Skinner," it says.

The voice and the face that says it are Mulder's.


Reaching From The Stars (2/2)


*

This is crazy! Absolutely insane! This is sick and twisted and I can't
believe my subconscious would ever create such a bizarre likeness of my
friends.

I wake to the feeling of undigested liquid swishing around in my stomach. My
mouth tastes like I had been sleeping with steel wool under my tongue.
Scully stands in the kitchen doorway watching me, whispering into her cell
phone. I can't hear her words. In fact, I can't hear anything at all.

Panic tugs at every muscle in my body again, stealing away the precious
blood being used by my stomach to unsuccessfully digest the leftover liquid.
Shooting pains jab at its walls as if the coffee has suddenly become a
deadly acid.

Scully remains still and unresponsive, as if she hasn't realized yet that I
have woken up.

I try to sit up, desperately seeking a bucket or bag -- something that will
catch the noxious liquid about to lurch from my insides.

"Scully," I grunt out, trying to hold back the continually threatening
sickness, gurgling to break free.

As if the mention of her name were an invocation, she finally sees me. She
beeps her phone off -- I can hear that! -- and she scans the room for a
receptacle. Spotting a small wastebasket by my desk, she grabs it and rushes
to my side just as I lose all control.

It isn't until after I have finished that I allow myself to think about what
has just happened. I am disgusted that Scully had to witness me puking my
guts out, vulnerable to the natural reaction to expel, no control over
etiquette or machismo.

She ties up the small bag inside the wastebasket -- thank God for that --
and carries it out to the hallway garbage chute. Upon returning she falls
into automatic pilot, unzips the gym bag, takes out a fresh towel and wipes
the cold sweat forming on my face and neck. I shiver at the contact.

Her hair is in a less than perfect ponytail than when she first arrived, and
the soft area above her cheekbones matches the dull blue in her lips. She
must be running on nearly four hours of sleep. How could I have thought to
bring her into this? This is beyond friendship -- at least, any I've ever
had.

"Scully," I whisper in a ragged breath. "You don't have to..."

"Yes!" The first word is louder than she expected, and she closes her eyes
to regroup. Then in a gentler tone, "Yes, sir, I do. I want to." After she
gives me a glass of water to rinse out my mouth, she continues. "Besides, if
you don't mind my saying it, who else is going to?"

I can't look at her. That one hurt. She didn't mean it to, but it did. Ever
since Sharon left me, I haven't allowed anyone else to dare get close to me.
It was too painful to think of replacing my wife when she left, and it is
still an inconceivable thought now. I love her. Scully's right, there will
never be anyone else who will care for me the way Sharon did.

"And --" her word is no more than a peep. "I can't let you leave me too.
Everyone I trust is gone." Then, more forceful, determined, "I need your
friendship. I think you need mine, too."

The orange color of evening illuminates Scully's wan cheek when I look up at
her with wet eyes. Yes, I do need her friendship.

I vaguely realize that the blinds are open again and that I'm having no
trouble with the brightness of the sunset. Must be getting better. As I look
at my friend, the reflected color on her cheeks is disturbed by a fluttering
shadow outside. I glance quickly to see a couple of sparrows land on my
balcony, silhouetted against the gorgeous evening sky.

I reach out to take Scully's hand in thanks, craving a familiar, real
contact that I can hold onto, that I can trust. My shirtsleeve inches back
away from my wrist as I extend my hand, revealing purple tracks branching
out to my fingers. Oh, no. It's happening. Just when I thought I was getting
better, the damned things are back! Scully notices as well, and grabs both
my hands to inspect them.

*--- More birds gather on my balcony, converging fast, blocking all the
light. ---*

*--- I see the Scully thing again, face to face with me. No, Scully's here,
holding my hands, this thing is invading our space, trying to force itself
between us. No, it's trying to get inside us. ---*

*--- I see Mulder, reaching out to me. He's taller. "You're an abductee,
Scully. I don't want to lose you." What's this? I'm Scully? ---*

*--- I hear a sob coming from the real Scully. She clutches my hands
tighter. "Mulder." ---*

*--- The walls of my apartment have fallen away. We are both on the empty
plain, leaves blowing against our ankles. I hear the metallic, piercing
noise again, "Sssssskkkkaaaaahhhh.." ---*

*--- "Skinner, what's going on?" ---*

*--- I can't -- I don't know . ---*

*--- The bright light in the forest is blinding. Mulder's been taken! I
can't save him. I lost him. I lost him. ---*

*--- The Scully thing with Mulder's face calls again, "Skinner, Skinner,
listen." It fades. What? Speak to me! What?! ---*

*--- I watch as my two agents face each other, holding the other's face in
an intimate embrace. Their lips nearly touch. When did this happen? I had no
idea, no idea. I'm sorry, Mulder. I lost you. ---*

*--- "She's there with you." Mulder's voice is loud in my ears. Where is he?
My confusion surrounds me. I can barely determine which things I'm seeing
are real. Mulder speaks again, but not to me. ---*

*--- "Scully, thank God you're all right." ---*

*--- Scully in a hospital bed. Scully wrapped in gauze. Scully with tubes
down her throat, encased in ice. ---*

*--- "Mulder? What is...? Yes, I'm here." ---*

*--- Mulder's apartment. A bowl of popcorn. The taste of butter on my
tongue. No, that's not me. I'm watching now. Mulder on top of Scully,
brushing the tears and strands of hair away from her face. Scully reaching
up to his head, running her fingers through his hair. They kiss
passionately, deeply, and lovingly. ---*

*--- "You must be pregnant by now." ---*

*--- Scully's grip on my hands loosens. ---*

*--- "Don't let go, Scully!" I shout at her. She can't! Somehow, I know that
if she does, all will be lost. Mulder will be lost. I won't lose him
again. ---*

*--- "How did you know, Mulder? How?" ---*

*--- Scully smiling. Mulder laughing back at her. Mulder's hand gently
removing the strap of Scully's bra. ---*

*--- No, I can't take this! I whimper. ---*

*--- "Skinner, I have to talk!" ---*

*--- Yes. Talk, then. ---*

*--- "It is ours, you know, Scully. I made sure of it." ---*

*--- "The baby?" She sobs again. Joy. Hurt. Anger. Confusion. ---*

*--- "I met with him." ---*

*--- Spender smoking in my office. Spender at the end of a gun barrel.
Spender in a car speeding down the highway, with Scully driving, offering
her a Life Saver.

*--- "No." ---*

*--- "I had to. I had to fix it. It was all my fault. I wanted this so much
for you, Scully. Wanted it so much for us. I wanted a family, with you,
Scully. I love you. I had to make a bargain." ---*

*--- "Damn you, Mulder!" ---*

*--- I lost him. ---*

*--- "It isn't worth the bargain!" ---*

*--- I lost him. ---*

*--- "I knew it would cost something, but anything was worth you having
happiness in your life." ---*

*--- "YOU are my life!" ---*

*--- I lost him. ---*

*--- "No, I caused pain in your life." ---*

*--- Selfishness. Betrayal. Failure. Hope. ---*

*--- "He promised me on that trip you took, that he would give you back some
of your ova. I knew what would happen, Scully. I knew the whole plan. I knew
you couldn't pass up a cure for all illnesses, even if it came from him.
Your trusting him was the only way he could get close to you." ---*

*--- "Damn you, Mulder." ---*

*--- "I had to do the rest. He had a time release -- something inside of
you. I only had two weeks. We had been so close for so long, Scully. It was
my greatest wish in the world come true. It was time for me to give back to
you what you had lost. I gave my own life to do that. I love you so
much." ---*

*--- I lost him. ---*

*--- Crying. Sadness. Loss. "I lost him too." ---*

*--- "I'm coming back". ---*

*--- "How?" ---*

*--- Fear. Exposure. Anger. ---*

*--- "I can't stay. I can't be seen! I WILL be back." ---*

*--- Metallic voices invade the space between Scully and me. Mulder's voice
fades. ---*

*--- "I wiiiilllll." ---*

Fluttering darkness consumes the two of us, and the Emergency Broadcast
tone rips through my ears, shaking my hands from Scully's grip. We break
apart violently. She slumps heavily to the floor. I crash back into the
couch damp with my sweat.

It is night. The sun has disappeared, and we lie in darkness, drained by the
unexpected message from a billion miles away.

"Scully?"

I hear her crying, lying on her back, groaning her despair freely into the
night air above her. "Oh, my God," she whimpers out between sobs.

I crawl down to the floor beside her, searching for her face in the dim
light. I hear her before I see her. She grasps my hand to her chest, and
it's all I can do to keep myself from embracing her in a secure hug. She
probably needs it now, but I'm her boss. I'm her friend, for God's sake. I
squeeze her hand back, and sit beside her in the darkness.

"He's alive," she says, almost inaudibly.  The sound of tears crackling at
the back of her throat are almost louder than the words.

She's letting herself believe.

The tears begin rolling down my cheeks as well. I am overjoyed at the
contact, but I am still guilt ridden with the thought that I was there when
he disappeared. But now I know he didn't disappear because of me.

"He's alive," I assure her. "We'll get him back."

*

I awake with a clear head and a deep appreciation for a dreamless sleep.
Scully insisted on staying another night. She also insisted that I opt for
my bed rather than the couch.

"I've got to have somewhere to sleep, too, you know," she jibed, giggling as
she took my arm.

She had been up taking care of me for nearly twenty hours straight, and with
little sleep before she arrived. I directed her toward a linen closet for
some extra sheets to use for the night, and then she led me to my bedroom. I
don't remember anything after that.

I walk slowly into the living room and find her folding up the sheets she
used during the night. I lean against the doorway, watching her until she
notices my presence.

She comes over to check my wrists and neck to find them free of hideous
purple veins. When Mulder had ended his message, my body returned to its
normal state of being. He must have figured out somehow to tap into the
nanotechs inside me in order to relay his message. How he knew that Scully
would be present is a matter only God himself could answer. Perhaps the bond
between two lovers is strong enough to span the galaxies. Was it ever that
way with Sharon and me?

Scully turns to sling the gym bag over her shoulder. "I've already taken the
liberty of calling in sick for you again, sir."

Work. Scully is always business first. It was as if she were preparing to
erect her proper exterior before leaving my apartment and setting out for
the outside world. She could at least suspend the formalities after sharing
such intimate details of our respective lives.

"Please, Scully. When we're like this, call me Walter."

Her gaze snaps down in embarrassment. Taking a deep breath, she looks up
again. "You take care. Walter." I follow her to the front door and let her
out. "I'll be back later. We need to figure out what we're going to do."

I catch her arm. "Scully." She looks at my fist clutching her arm, then back
at my face. "We wait."

She doesn't like the answer. She twists her face in a scowl, ready to prove
me wrong. But she stops and thinks for a split second, and realizes that I'm
right. She won't sit by and wait, though. I can see it in her eyes as clear
as glass.

"Goodbye, sir."

And she leaves.

I know what I said, and I don't want to believe it myself. There has to be a
way. As I close the door to my apartment, I've already taken the words back.
We'll keep on looking -- we will not give up!

*


Author's note: Hopefully, this story won't be too out of date once season
eight starts, but I thought it might be an interesting little story to have
while we wait for Mulder's return.
Thanks in advance to any feedback you send! I really hope to hear what you
thought of it!

-Theresa :-)

My e-mail: theresa@xf-mindseye.simplenet.com

