From: EMXC@aol.com Date: Mon, 9 Nov 1998 17:01:10 EST Subject: [EMXC Fwd] "Revelations I: Dawn" 01/30 by Windsinger REVELATIONS 1: DAWN (1/30) by S. Esty (AKA Windsinger@aol.com) begun 7/6/95, completed 9/98 Disclaimer: These characters belong to Chris Carter and Ten- Thirteen Productions but I hope it's okay if I borrow them a little. If you like this, CC, I'd be happy to write for you. Just send me an e-mail. Synopsis: Let us return to the days of yesteryear when Scully's abduction, bounty hunters, clones and cancer are still far in the future. It's the morning after the Jersey Devil case, Scully is dismayed to be given a temporarily reassignment while her new partner, Fox Mulder, does some work for VCS. Lots of FIRSTS in this one for these two. PG13 for some violence and occasional adult topics. Author's Notes: This is part of Revelations. Of the 8 total parts this was started 4th and finished 7th but, chronologically, occurs first. At one time I had 5 parts in progress at one time. Like the name of this series (which I sweated bullets over back in June 1995 before the episode 'Revelations'), the shape of this story and its situations were decided in July 95 way before Grotesque, Book I of Just the Two of Us, and Book III of All Hallow's Eve, so if you see a few similarities with some scenes - well, that's probably because there are. In any case these situations are not the core part of this story. The shape of the story was also decided before the wonderful fanfic Oklahoma. My original inspiration for Mulder profiling actually from the much older fanfic 'Machine of Intentions'. In this story, however, I try to take a middle ground. Though Mulder psychotic is interesting to read, I have tried for something more realistic. (Okay, large amounts of laughter here, I'm sure.) After all, they do have 7 more years of X-files to get through. While all of REVELATIONS takes place in first season (still my favorite with a few exceptions), DAWN begins *really* early, late in the afternoon after the death of the Jersey Devil. That's about episode 5. For that reason and because there are still 900 pages of REVELATIONS to go, just the seeds of relationship are being planted here. For culmination you have to read the rest of the series. (Yes, part 3: The Vacation *is* coming.) NOTE 1: I'm also detracting a few times from CC's official timeline (whatever that is). The 'Official' guide says Mulder didn't get out of Quantico until '88 and started the X-files in '91. I thought I heard at the beginning of the series the Mulder was a ten year veteran of the FBI. I'm assuming about 6 here but it's not really important. I have the Jersey Devil occurring six weeks into their partnership. Also, I have the very last scene from the episode happening the afternoon after the 'Devil's' death and not a week later as CC has it. There's a scene I really like which I'd have to delete if I changed the timing, so I won't. I'm the author and I'll allowed to do that. Yes, and though people have given me grief about it Mulder has a bedroom which he needs for Just the Two of Us. (Wait, I just heard that Mulder's apartment gets a bedroom in season 6! Just ahead of my time, I guess. ) NOTE 2: For those Revelations fans who thought Part I would be about our heroes trip to the Everglades where they run into the bugs and skunk from The Box, my apologies. This is something entirely different. There is also not much connection between it and the rest of the series other than it occurs in the same universe. In Book I of Just the Two of Us Mulder has a nasty flashback about something that happens here and there is one other reference but it is so obscure I couldn't find it if I tried, but it is something about being Scully's being carried in the rain. There... I don't think I've given away too much. Enjoy and thank you for your patience. REVELATIONS 1: DAWN (1/30) by Sue Esty (AKA Windsinger@aol.com) Begun 7/95, completed 9/98 Chapter 1 As the two solemn men exchanged glances, Dana Scully felt certain that she understood every word of their silent language. "Someone's made a mistake here," the senior agent shot to his junior. "We acted on a computer flag, sir," the younger agent seemed to say. Even his eyes were defensive. "Her field of expertise, her transcripts and her sex fit the profile perfectly for what we need. You know that the Fifth Floor is worried about complaints of discrimination." "But she's a shrimp! Do you want her responsible for protecting YOUR back." "She's a lab rat. She won't spend that much time in the field, not until the fireworks are over anyway." "She still has to go through basic training. That should give a few of the instructors apoplexy. And just look at her! With a face like that how many terrorists do you think she's going to be able to intimidate?" "So she's good looking. If the letters of recommendations from her medical school are any indication, she's the consummate professional." "And how many senior docs and professors did she have to sleep with to get references like that? Well, let's get on with it and hope we're wrong. Since we sought her out, we have no choice but to accept her application if she decides to apply." Monday, October 11, 1993 4:30 pm An irritatingly familiar ringing overlapped the senior agent's last speech, but it wasn't Dana's alarm clock from her apartment nor her travel alarm. It was a telephone whose bell stopped abruptly in the middle of its third ring. Forcing herself fully awake, Dana found with dismay that she wasn't at home. She had fallen asleep with her head on her *desk* and the phone that had rung belonged to her partner, Fox Mulder. Mulder, even now, was leaning his long body way back in his chair and, feet braced against his desk, was talking softly into the receiver. Even as he spoke his one eyebrow rose in apology that the call had awakened her. Just as well, Dana thought. She needed to uncramp her muscles and she hadn't really wanted to take in the rest of the dream, anyway. She knew that little scene by heart. Every sly glance, every unspoken inflection. Hadn't she relieved it on and off for almost four years whenever things went bad? And she knew why she dreamed it now. They'd messed up. A woman was dead. No, *she'd* messed up. Mulder had believed that the 'devil' was a living, breathing 'person' from the beginning. She had not believed him. Oh, she had known there would turn out to be something 'out there' in the woods. There was always at least a grain of truth in Mulder's theories. Dana had just not expected to find what they did. Even now she wasn't sure quite what they had found. Did it really matter in the end where the woman came from? She had lived, she had died. Dana looked over at her partner; he was just replacing the receiver. His face was dark, depressed, fatigued, unshaven, and dirty. They had come directly to the office from New Jersey, not interested in staying in that town a moment longer. Without jurisdiction and considering the animosity between Mulder and the police chief, Dana had been given no access to the body. Another reason for coming home. Besides they had work to do. There had been a death, jurisdiction or not, and so there were papers to file and questions to answer, not only to the authorities but to themselves. "Tell me that I don't look as bad as you do," she murmured, groggily. Even though the slight smile that came to his lips never reached his eyes, it was something. "You can never look as bad as I do. Why don't you go home and get some real sleep." "No, I want to finish this. I will take a shower, however." She stood up, stretching, her eyes going to the wall clock. Three hours. She'd slept three hours with her head on her keyboard. She probably had 'T', 'Y', 'U', 'I' imprinted on her forehead. "Why don't you get cleaned up, too, Mulder. It'll make you feel better." "I doubt that." "Take a turn on the cot then for a few hours." She cocked her head towards the rear of their shadowed office. A curt shake of his dark head. No, she didn't think so. That would be too much to expect. Unkinking muscles, Dana retrieved her emergency travel bag and her clean, spare suit from the utility closet in the far corner of the office and trudged off to the gym. It was in the whirlpool after ten minutes of floor exercises that Dana's mind finally began to unwind and the vision of that poor woman's body, naked and wildly beautiful among the leaves, began to spin out. Had she messed up? Her subconscious obviously thought so and, thus, The Dream. Why couldn't the phone have rung five minutes sooner. How she hated that dream. Sitting in the steaming, bubbling water, Dana retraced the last few days. If she had believed Mulder sooner, stayed with him in Atlantic City and foregone her godson's birthday party, would the outcome had been any different? It would have kept Mulder from a weekend in the drunk tank. But would that have helped the woman? Mulder certainly had tried his best. There was only so much one person can do when heads and hearts are closed. The Atlantic City authorities had just wanted their town clean. Okay, now it was clean. It was the police force that was dirty now. Dana let her hand come down flat on the surface of the forming water with a *SPLAT!* The effect was about the same as kicking a trash can and you didn't have to order a new one. Damnit, but she was a competent, respected professional. She couldn't allow every job-related tragedy to depress her. That kind of spiritual paralysis didn't do anybody any good. Hadn't she learned that lesson the hard way years ago in medical school? Guilt! ARG! She was probably catching it from you-know- who. You just did better next time, you just tried to anticipate the problems faster. Dana decided she'd been soaking long enough. Besides, the thoughts coming to the surface weren't all that cheerful. Work helped. In that she and Mulder were alike. She pulled herself up the steps and out of the enticingly warm water to shiver her way to the showers. But was this guilt she was feeling or inadequacy? Was her problem related to the fact that Mulder had seen so much more than she had? No, that road wasn't any more useful than the guilt. There was no point in trying to keep score with Mulder as to who could think up weird explanations first. That was Mulder's specialty. She had her strengths, too. Partners needed to complement each other and in that she had nothing to feel insecure about. She'd gotten her M.D., hadn't she? And in forensics, yet. That was still a tough field for women to break into. It certainty wasn't one of the more accepted and 'gentler' specialties which women physicians were supposed to go into like obstetrics, pediatrics or family medicine. Then there had been the traps she had had to negotiate to get through the FBI academy. The instructors had been wickedly demanding largely because of her size, as the two recruiters had feared, but two years post graduation and her record was exemplary. Her marksmanship was nearly the best in the national office. Easily higher than Mulder's. Her technical skills in the morgue and lab had won her numerous commendations. Her relationship with her superiors was good. It didn't hurt that she had never refused a assignment nor questioned an order other than a truly asinine one. So why did she still feel - incomplete - not just about this case but about her life? What more did the world want from her? she demanded as she stood under the shower head and scrubbed the taint of Atlantic City out of her scalp. As if in answer her mother's voice seemed to echo off the tile walls. "Okay, Dana... So what now?" Dana sighed. Oh, she remembered that conversation. It had been held four months earlier. The well-beloved voice had kept low so her father wouldn't hear. Dana could still Margaret Scully as she walked towards her holding a copy of Dana's fourth commendation and the bottle of wine. The little document extolled Special Agent Scully for a streak of insight and some precise forensics work that had led her coworkers to the door of some of those terrorists the recruiters had thought she would never be able to intimidate. "What do you mean?" Dana had asked back. "Where do you go from here? Dana, I know you. You're constantly pushing yourself. Setting new goals. Okay, you've got their attention. Now what?" Dana had smiled over the rim of her wine glass. "You always know, don't you?" Unlike her father, her mother had always been able to read her moods. Sometimes the woman knew her mind better than Dana did herself. It was uncanny. Her Celtic background, her mother joked. "You get this restless look in your eye. I've been noticing it growing for weeks. Hmmm... but now I see that it's a little settled down today. What have you done?" Dana put her glass down, becoming serious. "The work's good, Mom, but I feel so cut off. I'm just a supporting player. If I'm lucky, I'm driven out to a crime scene and can get down on my hands and knees and gather evidence for myself, but usually I only process other people's work. Often I don't know how a case starts; most of the time I'm never told how it ends. I think I could do better." "You want to see the whole picture." Margaret Scully should have been smiling but she wasn't. She knew where this was leading. "You're talking about going into the front lines, field work. Dana, even I know that's dangerous. Isn't just being in the FBI dangerous enough? Your father -" Dana's eyes shut involuntarily. "Dad needs to learn, this is my life." Dad. Her Ahab. He had been against her career choice from the beginning. A gallant product of his generation, Bill Scully felt duty bound to protect his daughters even if neither of his daughters wanted his protection. Sister Melissa was off somewhere with her crystals and organic food. Dana, the ambitious one, craved the challenge of working within the system. Both would have been more than content to just feel they had their father's support and acceptance. "Your father thought your forensics work was bad enough," her mother saying. "Now this. He'll see all that education going to waste." "I'll still spend plenty of time in the lab - they're too short-handed in the sciences to let me out permanently - but I'll be attached to a different department. And I'll get a real partner - hopefully someone who is more open minded and has less years than old Doc Alexander. Best of all, I'll get a chance to work on my own cases once in a while. Beginning to end." "This partner..." Margaret began, her frown bringing out the lines around her mouth. "You have no idea who you're going to get. Maybe it'll be some hot shot who likes to go in guns blazing." Dana could see reasons for her mother's worry. She had concerns of her own, but she also felt a tingling sort of expectant anticipation. The way Christmas used to be. Could that big box in the corner be full of school clothes and books again? Or did it conceal something wonderful? Something that could change her life? Something - or someone - who could restore some of the passion for life and knowledge she had somehow lost over the years? "We'll just have to see, Mom." Dana turned of the shower and reached for her towel. Well, the powers that be had complied with her request. What was the old adage? 'Be careful what you wish for?' Six weeks before she'd been given Fox Mulder for a partner. Fox Mulder. Mr. Creepy. The agent who had been dubbed 'Spooky' even as far back as his academy days. Brilliant, everyone agreed, but a few cards short of a deck. When she had walked into the cluttered hole some called an office, however, and come face to face with those penetrating, mocking hazel orbs through the lenses of his wire- rims, something had stirred inside her. If this was Christmas morning, there were no school clothes and books under that wrapping paper. Definitely not. At least the scenery was going to be pleasant. Fox Mulder was far better looking than his official picture which was so very grim and nerdy. Physically, he also appeared at least a half a decade younger then what she knew was his actual age. In other words, not so far from her own age. Far too young to have been with the Bureau for six years. He was well-tested. Too well tested some said. Some said broken and not put back together quite right; however, still a blazing, though unpredictable, talent. This was her new partner. She had been assigned to the X- files. When she heard through the grape vine about what was in the wind, she had to dig in some pretty obscure places just to find out what the X-files were. To put it bluntly, what she had learned had dismayed her. Within five minutes Fox Mulder had moved in her estimation from shiningly eccentric to just plain weird. And what was it they wanted her to do? Validate his work? How can you validate probes into beasts and monsters, aliens from outer space and the paranormal? Or were they really asking that she *invalidate* his work. Maybe this wasn't going to be such a great career move after all? "Calm down, Dana," she told herself then, and was still telling herself weeks later. "Concentrate on his technique and learn something." She would if she could find a consistent one. "It's not like this job has to be forever. Besides, it's only a two-person department. If you can't distinguish yourself there, then you're in the wrong profession." Over the previous two years Mulder hadn't been able to keep a partner for longer than six weeks. Some had barely lasted six days. If she could hold on for six months she'd probably be on the bureau's short list and could write her ticket anywhere. As the weeks went by, five cases were tackled and five cases more or less successfully completed. Not nice and neat by any means, but Dana knew that no other team could have done as tenth as well. On the good days, if she ignored the very messy loose ends, that fact gave her a quite satisfying sense of accomplishment. Nor had she any reason to complain about her desire to get out into the field. She had presented herself the first day with every intention of laying down the law about not being shuttled off to the lab, but she never had the chance, nor had there been a need since. Before she could turn around she was on a flight to distant Oregon. She had ruined three pairs of shoes on that trip and one of her favorite suits. Working with Fox Mulder was proving to as expensive as it was exciting. As Dana began aggressively to work on her newly washed hair with blow drier and curling iron, she realized that she wasn't as sure about her future as she had thought a few weeks before. She had expected Mulder to have sent her packing by now, either that or had expected to find herself tearing at the walls in frustration. Neither seemed to be happening. She was fairly content with the work and though Mulder grumbled some, he was no worse than other moody men Dana had worked with. So was this going to work or not? Was she in for the long term? How long was too long in a job like this. She felt on the fence, a position she didn't like. She realized that she wanted to make a commitment, either to this assignment or some other and quickly. That was just the way she was. One hundred and ten percent or try something else. Dana realized that she was waiting for a sign, a revelation. From Mulder? From herself? Leaving the gym with hair still slightly damp, Dana headed up to her desk by Pathology, her 'official' desk, to gather her mail and phone messages. She and Mulder needed to have a talk about the future of their partnership. But not today. A woman had died today. End of Chapter 1 REVELATIONS 1: DAWN (2/30) by Sue Esty (AKA Windsinger@aol.com) Begun 7/95, completed 9/98 For Disclaimer see chapter 1 Chapter 2 Monday, 6 pm "I have to show Mulder these eventually," Dana said to herself. "No time like the present, I guess." With a sigh of resignation, she thanked Dr. Alexander, picked up her brief case containing the precious file, and headed for the main Bureau building from the annex where the morgue was located. The old pathologist had proved amazingly useful. He didn't have to be. She had left his department. It must be tough to lose one of your shining stars, but he had never complained. In fact, Dana realized, he acted as if he had expected it. Today, it turned out that he had an old friend, who had an old friend, who had a daughter in the medical examiner's office of the Atlantic City police department and so within hours of the autopsy on Jane Doe being completed, Dana had the results in her hands. The folder Dana carried contained other lab results as well. Ones she had requested days before. Taken together - well, she knew what Mulder would pick up on. Dana groaned. Mulder had been out when she had stopped by the office on her way to the morgue to return her travel bag and retrieve her brief case. Maybe he'd gone home to sleep. He certainly needed it. Looking the way he did and being a member of law enforcement community, his weekend in the Atlantic City drunk tank must have required constant vigilance. Not a very restful situation. Dana almost smiled. She was certain that he'd managed to make it through with his virtue intact, however. She'd certainly have been able to tell if he hadn't. Plain exhaustion, therefore, should have induced him to go home. Dana hoped so. If he had, she wouldn't have to show him the file she carried until morning. Taking a deep breath for luck, Dana breezed into the office. She hoped to find it empty. It wasn't. Mulder was standing by the file cabinet. He turned as she entered. He looked surprising good. He'd obviously followed her lead and taken a shower and shaved. He wore clean suit pants and a crisp, white shirt and tie. He looked as fresh as if it were first thing in the morning. Until you looked at his eyes, that is. There was no flame in them. On the table was the distinctive envelop from the FBI photography lab. Mulder had borrowed a camera from Dana's old University of Maryland instructor, Dr. Diamond, and shot a roll of film before they left the scene. The film lab had worked fast. So that was the reason for the dead eyes; Mulder had just filed away the evidence of his failure. She handed him the file, no longer dreading his reaction. Any reaction would be better than the zombie-like nothing she was seeing. He took it without the alacrity she had expected. He was that tired. Briefly, she sketched the most notable autopsy findings for him. No use going into cause of death, but they had found human bone in the digestive tract. "They did allow Dr. Diamond to examine the body. He found no prehistoric bone structure or physiology." No response from Mulder even though the findings must have been a blow to his theory. "They have also released the report on the medical exam of the male body." She told him. Mulder listened. A spark, just the tiniest spark, was beginning to kindle. "There would have been offspring." Inwardly, Dana sighed. True to form, Mulder had picked up on exactly what she had thought he would. "The medical exam of the female's uterus showed that she may have given birth," she admitted, reluctantly. "It all makes sense... " Mulder was up, reaching for his suit coat as his mind began to spin out a new theory. "She was just protecting her children, Scully. The male dies and the females comes out of the woods in search of food." This wasn't Mulder's old self, not completely. He was still moving too slowly, but the tinder was catching. Dana had no doubt that very soon that mind of his would be back to running at its normal speed, which was way beyond that of all but a few other geniuses which Dana had ever met. He amazed her almost as much as he infuriated her. But how was he doing physically? He'd barely slept in days. He'd almost had his lungs taken out by the 'devil' and then he'd refused her advice and bled his way through the long chase in the woods. Would this be the day when, with his mind clicking along, his body would run - figuratively or literally - smack into a brick wall? "Mulder," Dana found herself blurting out, "will you do me a favor? Will you just go out and have a beer, take the day off. I'll cover for you. Take some time for yourself." But he was already airborne, the flame of the idea bandaging this new pain. "Sorry, but I've got an appointment at the Smithsonian with an ethnobiologist. I can't wait to tell him about this." Just then the phone rang and Mulder took the call, then casually handed the receiver over to her without comment. Dana was startled to find that the caller was Rob, the pleasantly boring estate planner she had been out to dinner with once. He asked if she and her godson wanted to go to the circus with he and his son. Dana froze. Out of the corner of her eye she saw Mulder striding away from her without a backwards glance. He couldn't have known who was on the phone but must have guessed. There had been no recrimination from him that twice she had left him to work alone in New Jersey while she pursued *normal* activities, like helping out at her godson's birthday party, and then when she went out on that date with Rob. Mulder had asked once for her to cancel but there had been no pressure. It was as if he had given his approval for her to go ahead and take the time and have a real 'life'. Then why was Dana still standing here hesitating while Rob was waiting for an answer? If she truly wanted some chance at a normal life, the answer was obvious. But all she saw was Mulder, alone, strolling magnificently onward on his quest to find his zebras and aardvarks among the plowhorses and stray dogs of the world. To all appearances he seemed completely disinterested in whether she was with him or not. Damn the man, anyway! She caught up with him as he was filling out a requisition for a car. For some silly reason, surprising him cheered her. Up until that moment she wasn't certain that she'd made the right decision. "Where are you going?" he asked as she matched him stride for stride towards the door to the garage. "With you to the Smithsonian." You couldn't have told from his body, which didn't hesitate for an instant, or from his prickling wit that followed, but something flashed in his eyes at that moment, a warm, bright light. "Don't you have a life?" he inquired. Dana didn't really hear the rest of their banter. They were just playing off each other as they liked to do. What she would always remember was the way he looked down at her as she held the door. In that wry smile of his was such hidden... pleasure. That was the only word Dana could use to describe it. He would never have said so, but it was obvious her decision to come along had pleased him. The Bureau's car pool issued them yet another black Taurus and Washington rush hour traffic was just as maddening as expected. Mulder's appointment was at the Smithsonian's sprawling storage and restoration facility in the Maryland suburbs. If they had been headed for the Smithsonian's Museum of Natural History, there would have been no need to requisition a car. The long, gray Federal-style museum was literally across Constitution Avenue from Chez Hoover. Dana recalled one incident later. As she was fastening her seat belt and Mulder was driving up the ramp from the underground garage, his head turned as he followed something with his eyes for a few moments. "What is it?" she asked, turning around just in time to catch a glimpse of the hand-painted sign. His eyes had turned forward, his brow furrowed in thought again. "Some sick-o has put up a score board. 'Hunter - 6, VC - 0'. The Hunter must have laid another one at our door step while we were gone." "That's the serial killer who's been abducting joggers and dropping the bodies in the parks around D.C.? The VC boys had better find him soon." Mulder nodded almost imperceivably. "They'd better." "Don't you ever miss working with Violent Crimes, Mulder? All the publicity surrounding a really big case?" "No," he said immediately. "No, I don't miss VC and, no, I certainly don't miss the publicity." Dana wanted to know more about his time profiling for the Behavior Science Unit. He'd been brilliant. The stories she had heard.... But his emphatic response left her no way to easily assuage her curiosity. His soft tones flowed into the pause, "So tell me about your date and this - Rob. Having no life of my own, I've forgotten what it's like." So she smiled as they merged into traffic and proceeded to tell him what she could remember about estate planning, acting as straight man for his barbed wit. Only later did she realize that the true intention for his question had been to change the subject. * * * * * * * * Tuesday, October 12, 1993 1 a.m. "Wake up, Scully, we're here." "Huh?" Dana stretched like a cat and tried to recall where 'here' should be. New Jersey again? Kentucky? Maine? "Party's over. I've pulled up next to your car," replied an amused voice. This time Dana jumped into something like wakefulness. She remembered now. She'd fallen asleep as Mulder drove back from their meeting with Dr. Harold Everett, the Smithsonian ethnobiologist. Mulder stood by the open passenger door and made of point of waiting with exceptional patience while Dana looked for a lost shoe she must have kicked off. "I didn't know you could be such a lush, Scully." "My falling asleep? I'd hardly call two beers being a lush and that was hours ago. It's just been a long... long day." That it had been. The reminder of the morning's tragedy sobered both their moods. Having finally located all of her possessions, Dana accepted, after some hesitation, Mulder's proffered hand to help her get out of the passenger's seat. Dana was struck as she always was by his manners. They were almost old-fashioned in their deferential attitude towards women. So much so, in fact, that she still had to take a firm grip on her radical feminist side each time he escorted her to and from one meeting or another. She was almost used to it now. It was just one more part of all the incongruous pieces that made up Mulder. "I had a good time tonight," Dana started, then realized that the words and the way they were standing alone in the dark, made it seem like they'd been out on a date or something. The problem was, Dana *had* had a good time. Hastily, she added, "Where did you find Harold Everett? In a hobbit hole? Mulder smiled one of the most genuine smiles she'd yet seen. Clearly, he had enjoyed himself as well. "Oxford actually, many years ago. We were two displaced Americans. He's one of the most well-read men I know." "He must be a hundred and ten. I guess he's had plenty of time." Dana didn't add that in her estimation Mulder came a close second and at a third the age. By this time Dana had managed to find her keys and had the driver's side door of her own car open. She leaned against it now, enjoying the cool darkness of the Washington air. "I have to admit that I didn't expect a pizza party." Across from her Mulder leaned against the Taurus, hands in pockets. "You didn't seem to mind." "Of course not. Did you think I would?" As a response, Mulder hesitated longer than she would have expected. "When Harry started pulling out the beer, I was concerned." "Did you think that I was as straight-laced as all that?" His feet shifted uneasily. "You take things pretty seriously most of the time." Unexpectedly, Dana found that the comment hurt. In truth, she was all too aware of the nicknames she'd gotten in college and since. Most had to do with cold, stationary objects. "I hope I don't, not all the time," she found herself saying, "but then you only know me from the office." She decided to take the leap; it seemed as good a time as any for breaking new ground. "So what kind of person are you when you're not at work?" "Worse," he replied. Standing in the shadows as they were and with his head down, Dana couldn't quite make out what kind of smile he gave her. Wry, ironic or shy? Maybe, Dana warned herself, this was enough for one night. "It's what, one-thirty? Someone should show up at the office for work tomorrow." Before she could do more than throw her briefcase onto the passenger's seat of her own car Mulder was beside her holding out a large flat box. "Here, take this. Harry gave me the leftovers. By the way you were enjoying it, you should have it." "No, you take it. You probably don't cook -" "Who says I don't cook? I just don't feel like it often. Besides, I have two boxes just like this one in my refrigerator from my last two evenings at home. It's getting crowded." He offered it again. "Go on. I could tell that you haven't had pizza for months." She shrugged, sheepishly. "Well, weeks anyway." Rather than argue till dawn she took it and with nothing left to be said, she pulled out of the lot with a wave. His dark, lean form stayed standing beside the car pool's Taurus, until she was out of sight. Dana drove with a surprisingly light heart. She wasn't even sleepy. Whiffs of the box's contents spiralled up towards her from time to time during her drive home. It brought to her memories of the evening the three had spent. Three friends, just talking. The original discussion of the poor 'beast' and its origins wandering off onto other subjects. "Another piece of pizza, Dr. Scully?" Harold Everett had asked somewhere around midnight, his toupee slightly off center. "Thanks," she said taking it and sitting back on the top of the professor's desk in his tiny cluttered office. "Call me 'Dana'." She remembered looking over at Mulder, who was rapidly turning pages in a book he had restlessly picked out of the anthropologist's bookshelf. "*He's* the only one since medical school who calls me Scully." Mulder looked up a little blankly, most of his mind still processing all those theories on the development of socialization in primitive man he had just scanned. He pushed his glasses back up on his nose. "'He?'" "You, Mulder. You're the only one who calls me 'Scully'." "That's your name, isn't it? Careful, you're going to drip sauce on your suit." He replaced the book. "Scully, why don't you describe the beast woman's physiology to Dr. Everett. You have a better grip on the vocabulary than I do. Did you see any evidence that would support that her evolutionary development was other than Homo Sapiens?" The memory was a good one, an excellent one. In fact if Dana had caught a look at her reflection in the rear view mirror at that moment she would not had recognized herself. Her face was lit with a good-natured smile. The unexpected meeting of the minds had been more enjoyable than any but two or three dates Dana had ever had in her whole life. The three of them had traded ideas, thrown open countless books, unrolled diagrams, flashed slides up on the scientist's wall and ate pizza until well after midnight. Dana had had more fun and had her ideas and her intellect challenged more thoroughly than she had in years. And then there was Mulder. The extent of his encyclopedic knowledge never ceased to amaze her. Gifted or not, he still had to come across the information someplace. So here Dana was with two brilliant men and both had listened to her, asked her opinion, and took what she said seriously, like a colleague, like a friend. Arriving at her apartment, Dana sat for a few minutes on the top step of the small porch in front of her building and watched the stars. As the cool breeze lifted her hair, an astounding revelation came to her. After years of chasing the diploma, then trying to fit herself into the FBI mold of a forensic pathologist, she had finally found the easy acceptance and intellectual equality she had longed for. She had found a place where she felt she belonged. * * * * * * * * Entering his small, utilitarian cave of an apartment, Mulder for once wished that he owned more lamps. His mood was that good. At first, he hadn't been so sure about Scully coming with him to see Harry. He was still uneasy about her reactions to his theories, but as he introduced the two he had felt an unaccustomed surge of pride. "Harold Everett, this is my partner, Dr. Dana Scully." 'My partner.' He didn't use the term loosely. He felt safer with her at his back. Not since Reggie could he say that about any of the others that had been assigned to him. The better ones had been so useless, he might as well as been alone. Those were in the minority. Most had been detriments, down-right dangerous. He would have been better off alone. But not Scully. She was stubborn, she was opinionated, she was infuriating, but she was also smart and fearless. She had the guts to stand up to him, to challenge him, which he knew he needed. She'd even waded in to debate with the old professor over the finer points of the affect of modern civilization on Darwin's theory of Natural Selection. Mulder knew few post-graduates who would have dared try. Scully would do. She would do very well. Content, he tossed aside jacket and tie and he sank back into the folds of his leather couch with a glass of ice water and idly began channel switching. That was when he noticed that the message light on his phone was blinking. The muscles in the back of his neck began to twitch. A hard lump of foreboding formed in his stomach and settled in as if it intended to stay. End of Chapter 2 REVELATIONS 1: DAWN (3/30) by Sue Esty (AKA Windsinger@aol.com) Begun 7/95, completed 6/98 For Disclaimer see chapter 1 Chapter 3 Tuesday, 9 a.m. Dana should have been tired the next morning. She wasn't. She didn't stab at her alarm clock too violently when it wailed at her, didn't swear when she found a run in her stockings, didn't grumble at Washington traffic. He foot was light on the steps as she entered the building. Her smile and step were confident as she negotiated the rabbit warren of cubicles on her way to her desk near Pathology to get her mail. Dana realized with rather a shock that she was actually looking forward to the day. This assignment with Fox Mulder was definitely not turning out as she had expected. She was not just an observer, she was rapidly becoming a part of the team, and in many ways 'Spooky' Mulder was maybe not so spooky after all. He just had his eyes open a little wider than most people. Suddenly, Dana wanted to know more about the brain that was behind those eyes. Her smile broadened. Some of the people she passed returned her smile warmly. On others the grins were brittle, a little cruel. None of that hurt today. She didn't even care that they must be reading a kind of smug pride behind her smile. Let them see. Even a week before their looks would have bothered her. Not today. Today was the first day of a... different life. Yes, different. Could one night of pizza and conversation make such a change? She had wanted a sign. Something to get her off the fence. Could she have found it in a greasy triangle of cheese and tomato and bread and in a pair of approving hazel eyes? Anything was possible. She worked on the X-Files. Now she just hoped that Fox Mulder would be ready to deal with Special Agent Dana Scully in full sail. She was ten steps from the door to the stairwell that would take her down to the basement when she was forced to dump a little wind from those sails. George Dempshaw. Small tendrils of anger drifted up entangling in her good mood. George Dempshaw was an analyst who had asked her out once over a year ago. She had refused him then, she would refuse him now six times over now. He stepped casually into her path. The expression on his face was somewhere between a sneer and a leer. "Dana, hear you got yourself a hot little assignment. You and Spooky staking out aliens under the stars. Must be... stimulating." "So nice to see you again, too, Agent Dempshaw," Dana said, trying to force a neutral tone into her voice but certain it still came out cold, "but if you'll excuse me I'm late for work." "Right, I heard. In the basement. Now exactly what kind of work does go on down there?" Dana's eyes narrowed. "We fight off the rats mostly... very *big* ones." That broke the man's sneer. He laughed brightly, looking again like the young man she had nearly dated. "Yeah, I've heard that about the bowels. Guess it also keeps you off the tour route. Wouldn't want to public to really see what their dollars are paying for." Feeling the steam begin to rise, Dana pushed past the laughing man to finally reach the stairwell. She let the door shut firmly behind her with satisfaction. Dempshaw thought he was going places. He'd better just get out of the way and watch her dust. Professionally, Dana was already seeing results. Maybe being linked with the X-files and Mulder wasn't going to be the disaster she had feared. The man who had assigned her, Section Chief Blevins, was satisfied with her reports. Also, she thought smugly, he was more than a little dismayed. Instead of debunking Mulder and his work, she had been - if not legitimizing it - at least putting enough of a scientific slant on it that much of what the new team uncovered could no longer be entirely dismissed. He didn't think she would be able to do that. That was what surprised them and that was simply delicious. * * * * * * * * Agent Fox Mulder sat at his desk trying to drink coffee without his hands shaking. He should have gone to sleep like a normal person the night before. He shouldn't have flipped on his answering machine. If he hadn't, he wouldn't have heard the message from Associate Director Walter Skinner asking Mulder to call him back immediately. Anytime. Skinner? Why would Walter Skinner be calling him? Mulder had worked directly under Skinner a time or two but only on a case by case basis. His impression was of a competent, humorless man, ex-military all the way. No nonsense went on on his watch. Skinner had been a rookie Associate Director for the Violent Crimes Section during two of the torturous years Mulder had worked there. During the two years since Mulder had been allowed to concentrate on the X-Files - which had been shelved under Blevins because no one knew where else to put it - Mulder had seen Skinner very seldom. There was one thing Mulder could say about Skinner - to his knowledge the man had never jeered openly at any of Mulder's wild theories. That put him in a rather small and select group around the Bureau. Now this resident of the fourth floor - not quite the fifth floor but close enough - wanted lowly agent Fox Mulder to call him back. 'Anytime?' Mulder grinned in wicked anticipation. To be given 'carte blanche' to call an Associate Director at two in the morning... that was an opportunity just too tempting to pass up. "Should have waited until morning," Mulder moaned to himself, rubbing his temples as if he could erase the tension headache that was already building. The voice of the man on the tape, however, had had that 'and I mean *now* tone' which Mulder had heard before. "If I had waited until a - still irritating - but more reasonable hour like five a.m., I could have gotten at least a decent night's sleep." At least what passed as a decent night's sleep for him, Mulder admitted. Surprisingly, Mulder was sleeping better than he would have expected, certainly better than before a certain someone had walked into his office. What he had forgotten was how different it felt to have someone at his side who had half a brain and some guts. What he had forgotten was how it felt not to be so totally alone. At that moment, the door to the X-Files office opened and that certain someone strolled in. Mulder had to shake himself. The room, the air itself, suddenly had an energy missing before her arrival. Mulder's brow furrowed slightly as he studied her. Here was a puzzle. He lived for puzzles and here was definitely one. What was different today about Dr. Scully? As usual her short legs were pumping nearly fast enough to keep up with even his long-legged pace. She was trim and professional and as perfectly put together as always. Then the difference came to him. Her smile. Inwardly he groaned. It was that perky Pollyanna smile which was new. She glowed with a happiness he found painful. It bounced off his bad mood like hundreds of little sharp knives. All right... Mulder knew that his partner had passed up a second date with that divorcee she'd met. Had she found a replacement already? When had there been time? She couldn't have gotten home from their meeting with Harry any earlier than he had which was about two A.M. It was barely nine now. Had she met someone in the elevator? Then a thought nudged unbidden into his mind. The nap on the way home had done her good. She had been wide awake as they stood talking by her car. There had been those pauses and she had seemed reluctant to leave. Had she been expecting something more? Something from him? Impossible. Still there had been moments that had been uncomfortable, like a first date. Would she had come if he had asked her out for coffee and dessert some place? Should he have? Restless, maybe she hadn't gone directly home but detoured by the divorcee's house after all. Maybe she had even gotten some. A second internal groan. That was all he needed - all those satiated vibes. Not today... bad any day, but definitely not today. Mulder could only take just so much happiness swirling around him and he had definitely just gone over his limit in the first twenty seconds in her presence. Now here she was placing her brief case on the evidence table which she had carved out of the clutter of his office to be *her* desk. She turned to him with her that smile still intact. He winced. "Morning, Mulder. What's on the agenda?" Mulder considered. Dana Scully was standing in front of him excited and clearly eager to get to work on whatever weird science she thought he was going to introduce her to today. Yes, he had made the right decision back there during his long early morning negotiation session with Skinner. It might just be possible that he could keep a partner longer than a few weeks, but only if he was able to steer her away from certain cases, certain cases like the one Skinner had just cohered him into accepting. "World to Mulder," she said, perkily, even as she briskly waved her hand in front of his face to get his attention. "What's on slate this morning? Back to trying to tie the outbreaks necrolytic acne in Tennessee to shiploads of irradiated vegetables?" Mulder blinked, coming with reluctance into the here and now and not even picking up on the joke. "Nothing for us." No one would ever say that Dana Scully wasn't quick. "Nothing for... us. Meaning nothing for the two of us? Meaning nothing for me?" she asked with a sudden edge to her voice. "You're working solo?" Mulder realized with consternation that from her tone she seemed not only surprised and disappointed but - hurt? Hurt? Disappointed? Maybe he should reconsider...? The tension headache that had been building since two a.m. almost immediately took a few additional turns until he felt slightly nauseous on top of everything else that had gone disastrously wrong with his life during the last seven hours. Should he - ? No, impossible. Nothing to be gained and everything to lose by exposing her too soon. Mulder wrapped his long fingers more tightly around his coffee mug, hoping that that way she couldn't see the return of the old tremor in his hands. "Associate Director Skinner called me last night. Like a third string running back for the Redskins, I've been traded." His smile was thin, brittle and not convincing. "I've been asked to profile the Hillendale Hunter for Violent Crimes." He forced a smug expression. "They've been through two profilists already and - nothing." Scully's eyes raised to his, narrowing. She was better than he thought. She was suspicious. "I didn't think you did that sort of thing anymore?" He shrugged, but his shoulder muscles were currently bunched into huge, rigid knots and he knew the action looked unnatural. "They've been known to come crawling to 'Spooky' Mulder when they can't find the end of their tails. Besides, before they let me leave the VCS mainstream, Blevins and I came to a little 'understanding'. Every once in a while I have to pay the rent on this place." His hand gestured, taking in the cluttered office. "This is one of those times?" Dana asked, still stunned. "They've reached a dead end and the authorities REALLY don't like upper middle class people being found butchered on Congress's front yard." To prove his point, there were two new and impressively tall piles of folders stacked on the corner of Mulder's desk. Carefully, Dana pushed them to the side and sat down. She was not particularly alarmed by his announcement. Not yet anyway. On the contrary, she sensed a challenge. Mulder was one man she could work with. She had managed to turn his course more than once. Granted, she had never stopped the voyage but she had altered the heading. Maybe that was why he had taken to running out of her as he had at Ellens. Maybe he recognized that there was a real possibility that he could cave in under her merciless logic. She could be thankful for one thing. With his new assignment still sitting in neat piles in front of him, he wouldn't be going anywhere soon. For Mulder, a chain and a padlock were far less of a deterrent to wandering than the job and his duty. "Listen to me, Mulder. I want in on this. The local news has been full of this case for weeks. Besides, I've been hearing for years about how uncanny your VC profiles are." "'Uncanny'?" Mulder said with a kind of brittle humor. "That's not exactly the word I've heard used to describe them." Dana closely studied this new partner of hers for the first time that morning. There was something dark about him that couldn't be explained by not enough sleep. He was... troubled. Oh, no, another mood and just when she had thought she had seen them all. Mulder could be irreverent, enthusiastic, unpredictable, single-minded. To authority figures who got in his way he could be assertive, cold, acerbic. She had also seen the injured side, the side that had bled to see the pain in Kevin Morris, who, Mulder theorized, had seen his sister abducted. This, however, was a new side to Fox Mulder. Did it have to do with the case? A notion stirred in Dana's brain. Mulder had opted out of the VCS, the crown jewel in the FBI's crown, and for what? Just for the X-Files? "Mulder, I've had the standard profiling course so I understand the basics. I've also worked with profilists from time to time in association with my forensics work. I'd appreciate a chance to see the process from start to finish." No expression in those eyes now. Whatever darkness she had briefly seen there was gone. His eyes were as blank as one way mirrors. No windows onto the soul, not this morning. He was frowning. "This is not a classroom exercise. You don't know what it takes." "Mulder, I want to see you work." "Profiling is something I do alone. Besides, I'm not pleasant company after day three." "Mulder, I know about working under stress. I've felt it in myself. Sometimes you feel that if anyone says just one wrong word to you, you'll explode into a million pieces. Maybe I can help." The blank eyes were seemingly not enough. A wall had sprung up which was almost visual and its breath was icy. "Scully, just drop it." The itch in Dana's head had become an alarm. Was this what other agents called intuition? If so, it was a new experience for her and it warned her to back away and not just with stop signs - with sirens and klaxons and foghorns and all in dissonant seconds and sevenths. Carefully, she slid off the edge of his desk and returned to her own. She should do just what he asked. She should drop it, give in and go, but that wasn't Dana Scully's style. Attack was her style! How dare he decide just like that when she wasn't wanted or needed on a case! "Mulder, if we're going to continue to work together I need to work with you under as many different circumstances as possible so that we can get to know each other better. And I'm talking about sharing both our strengths and our weaknesses." "I always got an 'F' in sharing," he told her dryly. "Besides, didn't you know? I'm not allowed to have weaknesses. Spooky isn't allowed to fail." "Mulder, please. There's nothing I would like better than to see you tear apart all of their theories and come up with something out of nothing." "Not... this time." His voice had risen sharply, almost angrily. If the investigation went on for too long, if it got intense, theories weren't the only things which were going to tear apart. "Besides, I think if you check your e-mail you'll find Blevins has assigned you to teach some classes at Quantico for the next week." His face was so distant, so cold. Nothing like the Mulder Dana thought she knew. Glaring at him Dana stood up and furiously swung towards the door as if she would leave him then and there but something passed over his face when he thought she had turned too far to see. Indecision. Reluctance. Loss. It was enough to tempt Dana to give it one more try. "Mulder, you need me." The vulnerability passed as if it had never been there at all and the hard glint returned in force. "'I need you?' You've been with the FBI for two years, most of the time standing in front of a corpse or bent over a microscope. I've spent nearly six years in the field." His eyes were like green stones. "Pray tell, how do I need you?" Dana couldn't speak to those eyes. Though cruelly put, all he said was true. Mulder had breezed through college and his Ph.D. program at Oxford. He was one of the youngest ever to enter the FBI academy and far and away the youngest profilist to be snatched up by the Violent Crimes Section after his accelerated graduation. What help could she be? It wasn't as if he needed her to guard his back. This time he was joining a fully staffed case. Not a little 'life on a shoe string' investigation like the X-Files. VC, especially if Skinner were involved, could call down more fire power than a marine assault unit if they choose, not that Mulder would need that. As the profilist, Mulder would most likely be sequestered ninety percent of the time in a room, shoulder high with affidavits, autopsy findings, trace evidence analyses, lab reports, video taped interviews and background checks on all the victims and suspects. She thought she could help but probably no more competently than a dozen others who had spent years working on similar cases. Dana became aware that neither of them had spoken in some time. When they needed to talk they talked, for hours, but they were equally as comfortable with silence when either of them needed it. Dana had spent so many contented hours working in this room. Reading, studying, writing analyses and reports. Mulder was a restless worker but she found somehow his pacing, seed cracking, and paper crumbling almost soothing. When it wasn't she could always go upstairs. Now, however, the quiet was as safe and relaxing as a minefield. He broke first. "Why were you assigned here?" Why was he asking her this? Why now? Though they had never spoken of it directly, they both knew. "To assist you. To add more structure to your investigations -" "Oh, is that all how he put it to you?" Mulder had risen and was advancing on her. "Do you think, Dr. Scully, that I enjoy reading your reports? That I enjoy seeing the 'spin' that you put on my work?" Dana stood her ground. "No one has ever disputed your being able to close a case. It's your explanations that are a little hard for management to accept." "The work is the work. Well, I've have more than enough eyes looking over my shoulder and jerking my chain lately, Agent Scully, so please, take advantage of the opportunity and relax your watch." The clawing sarcasm was unlike him. Something snapped in Dana's head. "Am I being dismissed, AGENT Mulder?" she inquired, something like a growl in the back of her throat. As his partner's anger flared to meet his own, Mulder realized that he had gone too far, way too far. And it wasn't as if the anger had been against her at all but was just a symptom of his helpless frustration. But Scully didn't know that. She didn't know him well enough. She was not one of the macho, thick-skinned, Clint Eastwood-wannabes that populated so much of the VCS. He had insulted her, he had bungled everything but good. This - whole scene - had been designed to give her an easy way out, to allow her to walk away without guilt. In a twisted way he had been trying to protect whatever good opinion she might have of him. Destroying it had never been his intention. "Scully, I didn't mean -" But Dana Scully was seeing red now and would not be placated. "Maybe we'd better just stop this discussion before more things are said which we don't mean." They glared at each other, the unspoken mired in the ether between them like mud. She waited for an explanation, an apology. He was forced to give her what she had asked for which was silence because an explanation would have been worse. Damn literal males! Dana swore under her breath. "Very well, Agent Mulder, but before you throw me out, let me at least change your bandages." He stood for a moment, confused, unable to follow this rapid turnaround in topic. Then the ache in his side came back to him. His personal reminder of his beautiful but very dead 'devil'. Having Scully play doctor was the second to the last thing he wanted right now, the last thing being that she would stalk out as angry as she was. Frowning, he removed his suit coat and slowly began to unbutton his shirt as she retrieved the medical kit she kept under her desk. He had learned quickly that she loved to doctor and having him to take care of made up for all the patient contact she was missing being a forensic pathologist. As he raised his T-shirt, she lifted the bandage. Mulder hissed as the new scabs caught on the gauze. The deep gouges where the Jersey Devil-woman had take a hunk out of his side less than twenty- four hours before were still red and fresh-looking. "Mulder, are you keeping this dry?" "Would you rather I didn't take a shower?" he grumbled. "You could try taking a bath." "You haven't see the bottom of my bathtub, have you?" "I've not had the pleasure." Frowning, she opened her kit. If their first few weeks together were any indication, she was going to need to get a larger kit just to keep Mulder in gauze and tape and antibiotics. "Okay, sit on the edge of your desk and lean back so I can bandage this again." She was not gentle because she didn't feel like being gentle, but Mulder gritted his teeth and refused to utter a sound. Once the last strip of paper tape was applied to his smooth, pale skin Dana began repacking her kit. She was angry at herself and him for this total ruination of a day which had started out so splendidly. Able to think of nothing else to delay the inevitable, she asked, "Do you want me to come back?" The question cut into the silence like a very sharp knife. Confused, Mulder looked up from where he was attempting to retie his tie without a mirror. "What?" "Do you still want us to work together," she rephrased irritably, "or are you going to ask for another partner?" "No!" That more vulnerable emotion that wasn't anger was back, the one she had caught a glimpse of before only stronger this time, nearly panic. "Of course I want us to continue to work together." His obvious sincerity went very little towards soothing the rejection Dana felt. "You just don't trust me to work with you on this particular case," she summarized with a voice like flint. Fox Mulder, who seldom found himself at a loss for words, faltered. "Scully, trust has nothing to do with it," but she was already out the door, in fact, had nearly run out and never heard his attempt at an explanation. Nor did she ever know how strongly a part of him wanted to stop her. That part, however, got his feet only as far as the doorway where he stood listening to the fading sound of her steps, the distant opening and closing of the door at the top of the stairwell, and the silence that followed. End of Chapter 3 REVELATIONS 1: DAWN (4/30) by Sue Esty (AKA Windsinger@aol.com) Begun 7/95, completed 9/98 For Disclaimer see chapter 1 Chapter 4 Tuesday, 10:30 a.m. Dana held tight to her anger as she flew up the stairs. It was either that or admit to the tears that were far too close to the surface. She would not, she would not, she would NOT! allow Fox to Mulder make her cry. She was an FBI Special Agent, a forensic pathologist, and a grown up! He was... he was just a man! A brilliant, talented, troubled man. Sometimes gentle, sometimes impossible. A man... and a friend. That's what hurt. She had thought he was her friend or was on the way to being so. From their very first case she had gotten the impression that he was lonely - not in a pathetic sort of way but in a Mulder sort of way. He seemed to truly appreciate the company, even the arguments - most of them anyway. Could she have read him so wrong? Furious, Dana totally ignored her desk near Pathology to storm her way directly to the fourth floor like a small hurricane. Strangely enough, she found Section Chief Blevins and Associate Director Skinner together in Blevin's office. Dana fixed her eyes unblinkingly on Skinner as she entered. He was the one to blame, the one who had called Mulder in on the Hunter case. She didn't know him well but had heard that he would probably be bumped up to Assistant Director very shortly and, therefore, not a man to irritate if you valued your career. On the other hand, rumor had it that he respected agents with a certain amount of fight in them. As he rose to offer her his chair, he returned her accusing glance with a steady one from which she could read nothing. Tearing her eyes away from Skinner, Dana turned to Blevins who was, after all, both her and Mulder's direct report. So who was the real villain here? He must have allowed this. The sullen, graying Section Chief was coolly business-like. He had noticed her wary perusal of Skinner. "Anything you want to say can be said before Associate Director Skinner. I assume you've come about your re-assignment?" Dana realized that that was all she really could complain about. Not about Mulder's being reassigned, only herself. It made her argument shakier. "I'd like to know why I'm being sent down to Quantico, yes. Have I failed somehow?" Despite herself she felt her lip curl derisively. "Did I write a report on a case that was not sufficiently damning to Agent Mulder's work?" Blevins leaned back in his high backed leather chain and steepled his fingers. "Agent Mulder is senior agent in your office. Why don't you ask him?" "Agent Mulder is not exactly in the mood to be forthcoming with information at the moment." "So it's that way already, is it?" Blevins asked. The man's comment was presented as if he smelled something distasteful. Dana's gut response was to jump to Mulder's defense. There was no love lost between Blevins and Mulder, that had been clear at the beginning, but before she had time to speak, Dana saw out of the corner of her eye an expression on Skinner's face that was almost sympathetic. By that time Blevins was speaking again, "Under the circumstances, Agent Scully, I think you should know it all. You're being given work at Quantico because they could use the help - and because Agent Mulder requested it." From his position standing back lit near the window where he thought he wouldn't be noticed, Skinner frowned. Incredulous, Dana felt her legendary calm slipping. She realized her mouth had fallen slightly open but no sound came out at first. "He what?" She had assumed that her reassignment had been order by Blevins after 'trading' Mulder to VC. She had been furious with Mulder for agreeing, but had never thought for a moment that it had been his idea. Sensing her consternation, Skinner stepped in. "I asked for Agent Mulder's assistance. Your 'temporary' reassignment was a prerequisite for his accepting this case. The Investigative Support Unit needs him on this, Agent Scully, and relations are strained enough between the ISU and Mulder that they don't beg unless they're really desperate. You only need to listen to the six o'clock news to know that the Maryland and Virginia police are stymied over these incidents. The investigation is dead in the water and bodies are still being found. They need Mulder and, since I've been assigned the thankless task of managing this fiasco, so do I." "But I'm his partner. He says he works alone when he profiles. That I can understand, I can stay out of his way. But certainly there must be something I can do to help. At least I'll be available if he does need me." Wasn't that what partners were supposed to be there for? Skinner's impressively bare dome moved ever so slightly. "You'll have to take my word on this, Agent Scully. I've worked with Agent Mulder before under similar circumstances. If he wants you at a distance, then it's for the best." Dana stood up, her eyes blazing at both men. She knew when she had been dismissed - and for the second time that day. Very well, she would leave, but sooner or later there was going to be hell to pay. She had her hand on the knob of the office door, her back as straight as if someone had put an actual iron spike up her spine, when Skinner's distinctive voice called her back. "You haven't said so in so many words, Agent Scully, but we are aware of Agent Mulder's propensity for going off lone wolf. I won't say don't worry, but we'll do everything in our power not to let that happen." Dana turned back for just a moment. She raised her chin and let it nod just the tiniest bit before sailing out, moving quickly before her face betrayed her. As angry as she was, she did not want Mulder hurt and, yes, she realized that that was what had gnawed at her from the first - that she would not be there to pull him back in, to protect him. Where had those feelings come from and how had Skinner known before she had known herself? Skinner's frown deepened as he looked at the door that had closed behind the furious young woman. He had heard that Agent Scully was a bit of an iceberg. One would never have gotten that impression from this encounter, but then the woman had just received what she could only perceive as a professional slap in the face. In her place he would feel the same way. He had not agreed with Mulder. Skinner had offered to bring the man's new partner in on the case in any capacity Mulder wanted. He had been shocked by the younger man's absolute refusal. Bad idea leaving your partner in the dark, out of the loop, Skinner thought. It would probably mean a crisis of trust somewhere down the road. Besides, one day 'it' might happen on an X-Files case and then what would she do? Out there, somewhere, all alone with him and without anyone for her to turn to. With her steaming anger quickly turning glacial, Dana snapped up an empty copier paper box and threw in a few personal items from her desk near Pathology. Within ten minutes of her meeting in Blevins' office, she had removed herself from Bureau headquarters. Those she blew past in the hallways were left wondering whether the female version of Jack Frost had just made an early visit. She didn't return to the basement. All she needed which she didn't have, she would buy, borrow or steal from the academy. * * * * * * * * It was too quiet. Mulder paced before his desk, hands deep in his pocket. She had been gone thirty minutes, long enough to realize she had left her brief case behind. Scully didn't forget things like that. She wasn't coming back. His cluttered cave of an office was as large as it had ever been, which had never seemed large enough - until now. Slowly, he closed his eyes. What he saw was not blessed darkness. A huge, empty hole seemed to have opened up right in front of him. What a fool! He couldn't image how he could have conducted a meeting worse. Another triumph to record in his scrapbook of disastrous social faux pas. Great, just great. In Dana Scully he had seen the best partner potential since Reggie Purdue and now he'd gone and alienated her but good. Scully would probably never talk to him again. At that moment what Mulder wanted to do more than anything was to take a few minutes and really wallow in how he had fucked up his life once again, but knew he didn't have the time. He would have to work out his problems with Ms. Scully later, if there was a later. In that he found some hope. From their brief but intense time together, he had found that, while Scully may be stubborn and opinionated, she was also fearless and definitely not a quitter. She would be back, just, he hoped, not too soon. You will be back, won't you Scully? Please. Enough wallowing. He had work to do, unpleasant work. Too many people were dying, and the animals in the viper's hole on the second floor had come to him, offered him anything. That scum he could have turned down, them and all the glorious publicity he'd receive for helping them to catch one of the really big ones - but not the victims. He couldn't turn his back on the dead and those who would join their select company if this killing machine wasn't stopped soon. The man was escalating fast. He felt the itch in his palms. It was still there. The seduction of unwrapping the puzzle, laying out the pieces, putting them all together. It *was* like an addiction... at the beginning. Later, it was like being caught up in a drug that had you by the heart and the head and the balls. At the end... like going cold turkey. Tearing apart... Coming down. Stop. Perhaps, Mulder speculated, perhaps the process wouldn't be as devastating this time. He was older, more experienced and he had healed, more or less. He had only to dig through all the case data, follow leads, find a pattern, ask the questions: Why this time? Why these people? Why this place? Why this manner of death? He could do this kind of work standing on his head. Always could. Piece of cake. his reasoning side reminded him, No one. No one here but us sword fodder - the foot soldiers sent out onto the front lines to be ripped down first. Sacrifices for the greater good. The pile of file folders on his desk called to him. He found them not so seductive after all. More like traps, like sucking tar pits, like innocuous but deadly pools of quicksand. Already he could feel the ghosts beginning to hover. The visions and recollections of all those other horrible cases he thought he had buried, the twisted emotions of all those other sick minds. Why else did he force himself to keep so busy? If he didn't stand still maybe the ghosts couldn't catch him. What was he doing walking into that house of horrors all over again? There should be someone guarding his back, and he knew just the one. A flash of red hair and a little body, slender but as strong as tempered steel. But she wasn't there. Wouldn't be there. He'd sent her away - thrust her away - protection for the future. So there was no one, no one at all with him, only the men from the team who would be coming in a few hours to pack up all this and take him away to someplace quiet and secure - very secure - where he couldn't be disturbed - or disturbing. They all knew the drill. It was in his file. These men, however, couldn't be counted on - not for backup, not for protection, and certainly not for companionship. In the end they could end up just as much his enemy as the monster he was trying to catch. His isolation made him feel physically ill and frighteningly naked. Mulder took his hands out of his pockets to see if they'd stopped shaking. They hadn't. Again he became aware of how silent the office was and how empty. For an intelligent man, Spook, you can be incredibly stupid sometimes. * * * * * * * * In her apartment that evening after spending the day at Quantico in a haze of frustration, Dana threw herself down on her couch, kicked off her shoes and settled herself in for a good sulk. She'd show Skinner, Blevins, *and* Fox Mulder. She'd been making her case in her head all day even as she'd listened to the FBI Academy's Instructor General brief her on the class they needed her to teach. Point one: Skinner had made it plain that the current arrangement was temporary. Fine she'd play along. Be the good soldier. It would earn her points and help her later when she was ready to spring her next career move on them. Why shouldn't she leap-frog it? The males at the Bureau and in most businesses certainly did it often enough. Loyalty didn't seem to matter for much. Point two: Dana had worked with enough bureaucracies to know that good intentions, even promises from soon-to-be Assistant Directors, meant very little. She needed to look out for herself. No one else would. For the 'good of the organization' she and Mulder could be separated in a heart beat. She'd be one step ahead of them. Point three: She had already shown herself to be competent and flexible. A good team player. Hadn't she been able to work with Fox Mulder for six weeks? Mulder had a history of eating potential partners for breakfast. Some of his previous victims hadn't lasted six days. If she could tough it out for six months, that would be some kind of record. If you could work with Spooky Mulder, you could work with anyone. Hmmm, maybe this was all just some kind of a test, like a right a passage. Everyone had to put up with Fox Mulder for a long as they could stand him.... or until Mister Popularity took it into his head to rid himself of them. Like now. Point four: For the good of her future credibility, it was best that she move along before she got herself into a case which she couldn't explain away as a psychosomatic illness, a genetic mutation, stress, or a dysfunctional childhood. There, short term goals all nice and neat. She'd get what milage she could out of the position and then move on. She would not allow herself to be treated this way! Energized by at least the temporary pacification of her injured pride, Dana began one of her hurricane sweeps through her apartment - straightening, sorting laundry, stacking paper for the recycling bin - when the door bell rang. Bent over the washer, her arms full of wet sheets which probably hadn't needed washing anyway, she froze. Mulder? Was that possible? Had he come to apologize? Eat a little humble pie and ask her to come back? Would she? Stuffing the sheets in the dryer, Dana headed for the door. She would. She'd make him sweat first and pay later big time, but she'd go back. The case had very high visibility and what she had told him about wanting to watch him work had been the truth. It was a coldly logical response. She tried not to acknowledge that there were other deeper, warmer, feminine reasons. She had seen him hurt - physically, mentally, spiritually and professionally. He was also not nearly as unaware as most people thought he was of how his pursuit of the X-Files was viewed by the rest of the Bureau. Damnit, but she wanted to defend him and she wanted to shield him because she knew no one else would. Setting her face to reveal neither pleasure nor anger - both of which were mixed within her in confusing proportions - Dana opened the door. A form was lounging against the opposite wall. There was a smile. Right leg was crossed over left. A wine bottle was swinging. Not Mulder, not even close. Her sister Melissa. The slender woman of medium height - which meant a few inches above Dana's - pushed herself languidly away from the wall. "Well, do I get to come in or not?" Her voice was as sleepy-mellow as her eyes. "Sorry." Dana held open the door. "I'm just so... surprised." "I don't know why you should be. I always come unannounced. It's my trademark. Got a cork screw and some glasses?" Dana went to the kitchen, calling over her shoulder, "I thought you were off studying in Switzerland with some holy man or other and that alcohol muddied the rhythms." "I was," Melissa said as she dropped down onto Dana's couch, "but they're muddied anyway with the jet lag so why waste a perfectly good muddle. What's worth doing is worth overdoing. Besides, this is a good burgundy. Its tannins are good for the heart." Dana came back with the glasses and the corkscrew. "You've been to see Mom, I assume?" "Of course. Took two hours, but she filled me in on all the family doings." "We haven't heard from you for three months." Dana's tone wasn't accusing, just curious. Ever since college Melissa tended to drop out for long periods to go off to study crystal reading, aural projection, organic gardening and other related New Age curricula. "Learn to levitate yet?" Melissa sadly shook her mound of dark red hair. "Lama Duvie doesn't go in for the theatrics." They talked of family matters and Mel's future plans as each finished their first glass of wine. With her second glass cradled in her hands, Melissa leaned back and scrutinized her sister with more pointed interest. "Enough about me. What's Mom tell me about a new job for you at the Bureau?" For a moment Dana was confused. How had her mother learned about her reassignment back to Quantico so quickly? She hadn't told anyone except a few people at headquarters who needed to know. Then she realized that Melissa's information was months old. She was talking about Dana's leaving Pathology. "I got restless at the lab. I asked for a new position, that's all. I have a partner and he doesn't even need a cane to get from one side of the room to the other." No use in getting into the current day's complications. "Right. Mom told me his name. What was it again?" Melissa asked, swirling her wine. "Fox Mulder," Dana repeated. How odd his first name still felt on her lips. "He isn't from California by any chance, is he? What kind of name is that for an FBI agent?" No one was more surprised than Dana herself as she felt a flush of indignation. "The one his parents gave him which he can't help and which he hates. At least I assume he does because nobody, but nobody calls him Fox." "Hmmm. So what sort of cases does this Fox Mulder specialize in?" Dana felt herself squirm just a little. "Serial killers, rapists, terrorists. When he worked for Violent Crimes he was their golden boy." "Past tense, I notice." Melissa's eyes glowed with mischief. All the Scully children were quick. "So what's he been doing lately?" Dana hesitated. She hated herself for doing it, but she hesitated. "Like I told Mom - he concentrates on cases other departments can't solve." Dark eyebrows raised inquiringly. "And...? Come on, Dana, I know you. What kinds of cases other departments can't solve?" Dana sighed. Melissa, the New Age ditz, was going to love this. "Unexplainable by normal means." Melissa stared, the thought sinking in. "You're talking para-normal, aren't you?" When no denial followed, Melissa laughed so abruptly that she had to cover her mouth with her hand to keep from spraying burgundy all over Dana's couch. "Dana, you have to be kidding. Dad must be catatonic. His pride and joy chasing ghosts." Dana felt her back stiffen. "I was brought in," she said distinctly, "to make certain that the more traditional scientific explanations for these phenomena are not ignored. We've only had a few cases together but we've seen some incredible things." "But ones with rational explanations." "They all could be explained that way, yes." Melissa looked skeptical. "Really?" Mel had done it again. She always could jerk Dana's chain. Of course, that was the way her reports had been written. "Solid scientific explanations," Dana admitted, "or no explanation at all owing to insufficient evidence." "Are you being honest to this man and to yourself or are you just giving your superiors what they want to hear?" Dana blushed with pique. How could she answer that? Who was she to say that such and such a phenomena had been caused by ghosts? Was laying the blame on alien intervention any better? Or government conspiracies? There she felt a twist of guilt. She had seen Mulder's vacant stare as they drove away from Ellens. That had been real. Something *had* happened. He had been hurt deeply and her government was to blame and yet other than getting him what little medical attention he would accept, she had written it off, dismissing the incident as too hot to handle. In all seriousness, Melissa leaned forward. "Dana," she said softly, "to accept such a position where you know you cannot be totally objective, isn't like you. You usually throw yourself whole-heartedly into your work." Dana remembered with a pang. Her silence, she knew, was more damning than any denunciation. "Dana, don't do this to yourself. Do a good and true job or get out. Your Fox Mulder won't appreciate it and certainly those of us who believe in such 'other' possibilities don't need you covering up what little true evidence there is." Ouch! That had hurt. "Mel, do can you really think I would falsify evidence?" "You don't have to. You just need to continue giving these cases other explanations." "Mel, you have to believe me, I'm not part of anyone's agenda. I want the truth as much as Mulder does, as much as you and your friends do." "Really?" Mel wasn't being cruel, she was just probing, Dana realized. Helping her straight-laced sister to understand those nasty, confusing emotions the younger sibling was always running away from. "If I didn't feel that I could at least try to be objective, Mel, I'd walk away. I would. I can't help what's inside, however. I can't help but look for explanations within the realm of science first. That's why I was given the job. As for Mulder, sure we argue, but he hasn't asked me to leave yet." Dana found her hands shaking. "Mel, I'm going to tell you something that I don't want you to tell anyone. Not anyone. There's something in the work. Maybe it's seeing it through Mulder's eyes. It's intriguing. Exciting. I've never felt this way before. It's not only challenging intellectually, but fascinating personally." Dana paused. She had knelt by Mulder's side in that dark warehouse and, though bleeding and in pain from having just been clawed by the 'beast woman', his voice had been filled with a glorious awe - "She was beautiful, Scully!" - as if he had just beheld a rare flower or seen a shower of shooting stars. Melissa had settled back in awe herself. "This guy I have to meet. If he can have such an effect on my dwebby little sister... Joan even says that you told her he was kind of cute." Dana's head came up with a start. "You certainly have been busy." "Well, you're not the only one in this family who can investigate. Mom says that you and our dear domestic cousin talk so I just thought I'd get all the facts before I came over." In their depths Melissa's eyes were glittering like a great cat who is deceptively lethargic on the outside but all hunter on the inside. "So, when do I meet him?" "You don't," Dana found herself saying, rather more sharply than she expected. Her sister and her partner? Those two together? It would be safer to stand on the San Andreas fault. "What I mean is, he's on a case." "I don't see you working. When's he get off this case? I'll be in town a few more days." She sipped from the glass again, the wine reddening her lips. Dana felt a wild, foreign emotion rising up through her chest. Why was she sweating? she told herself. Melissa watched her sister's blush with devilish interest. "He really is on a very critical case. I don't even get to see him." "Undercover?" Mel asked becoming more serious again. This was, after all, the work her sister did now. "Not like that, exactly," Dana explained. "You know, thinking about it, you two won't have as much in common as you might think. You see the New Age stuff as something very spiritual, almost as a religion. Mulder sees it as all so very natural. Things just are. More like - " "Science?" Melissa offered her barb quite decidedly pointed. "Maybe you two are the ones who are closer than you thought?" The realization that hit Dana was almost electric in nature. Was is possible? Similar? Just a few weeks ago she'd been thinking quite the opposite, of how she could make a name for herself by taming Mulder's wild talent and bringing his eccentric genius back to the fold. To make her point and move on. To stay with the X-Files for long would be professional suicide. Now, however, the morning's commitment she had made to herself to jump into the work with gusto fell much more heavily on her conscience. Mulder. It was all Mulder's fault. Dana stared into the ruby red liquid swirling in her glass. She realized that she had come to see the individual behind the man. Mulder was not her private project to save any more than he was VC's legendary profiler or the office loony. Mulder was a person, a very unique person. She would never have thought so after her first case but he was actually not so very hard to work with as long as you didn't stand in his way. He was like some big, intelligent, half-grown blood hound puppy whose head was so full of scent and spirit, so full of will and energy, that he tripped over his own feet in his enthusiasm. He *did* want to learn, he *did* want to discover. He *was* more of a inventor than anything. Dreaming dreams no one else dared to dream. Inventing truths. Melissa went on to other topics but Dana barely heard. What was she going to do now? She was still angry over the current case but now she could at least frame it within the larger picture. Only the picture, which had been a nice clean map whose roads clearly marked out her past and her future, was suddenly full of grays whose frontiers were defined in simple blotches of color. Some were jarringly disturbing but others were quite fascinatingly beautiful. End of Chapter 4 REVELATIONS 1: DAWN (5/30) by Sue Esty (AKA Windsinger@aol.com) Begun 7/95, completed 9/98 For Disclaimer see chapter 1 Chapter 5 Monday, October 18, 1993 For three days, five since she'd seen Mulder if she counted the weekend, Dana stuck to her temporary assignment. She taught the classes, graded the tests, and counseled the young men and women who were stumbling in the hallways and losing their lunches in the morgue sinks after lab. Anger carried her through the first two days. After that she realized that the work wasn't really so bad. Teaching she had done before and the familiar words and phrases were all there on the tip of her tongue. The appreciation for her efforts and experience was there, too, which went a long way towards soothing the sting. The lingering confusion left over from her conversation with Melissa she put away in a deep place. She had decided that she couldn't resolve her feelings for why she was continuing to work with the X-Files until she was actually doing it. One morning after she had given a lecture her students had actually listened to, and after a lab during which none of her students lost their breakfast, Dana slipped away for a well- earned break in the small but tastefully furnished little office that had been released for her use. Soon she was leaning back with a cup of her favorite herb tea. She had just finished her second piece of early Halloween candy when she realized that someone had gone to a lot of trouble to see that she was happy here. The work was good and there was neither too much of it nor too little. The accommodations, considering that she was a simple substitute instructor, could not be better. Much as she would like to thank Mulder for her current situation, she very much doubted he had been involved. Not only were the personal touches just not Mulder's style, but there hadn't been time. He had been as surprised by the case as she had been. Blevins? He would have been just as happy to send her down to the secretarial pool for a week or, more likely, back to her old position, following on the dottering heels of Dr. Alexander. Who was left? A.D. Skinner? The man did have depth. Dana found herself wondering how the report structure might be reorganized once Skinner moved up. He certainly seemed to be taking an interest in Mulder - and, Dana realized - in her. It was not unheard of for Assistant Directors to take small departments directly under their wing, skipping the need for a Section Chief for all but administrative matters. By afternoon the tea and candy and the comfortable chair were forgotten. Rumors were flying that the Hunter had dumped another body. Number seven. The news filled Dana with dismay. As angry as she still was at Mulder, whom she had not tried to talk to since that horrible morning and - even worse - who had not tried to talk to her, Dana had wished for his success. Unrealistically, she had expected him to pull up a profile with the wave of his hand that would be so exact that within forty- eight hours the perpetrator would be in custody. If Dana felt badly about the continued deaths, how must Mulder feel? As she wrote the outline for her lecture on the blackboard, Dana felt an unreasoning urge to call him. She wanted to ask how the work was doing, to ask if he was serious when he said he saw them working together again in the future. They had functioned well together, Dana thought. Mulder had freely said so himself. Dana pushed the chalk so hard against the board that it broke. Damn, she shouldn't be the one to make the first move. He was the one who started this. So why didn't the ingrate call! * * * * * * Thursday, October 19, 1993 8 p.m. Day nine since the dreadful morning. Dana returned to her apartment after a late night grading papers. She dragged. The new routine had been like a vacation in the beginning. It had quickly lost its appeal, however. Tonight she felt no spark in the teaching or in her. Her apartment was neat, clean, orderly and sterile. Dull. Her life was dull. She had worked late but not nearly late enough. Not as late as she often worked with Mulder when they found themselves inhaling Chinese food at ten in the evening after both realized that they had forgotten to eat since breakfast. Tonight Dana didn't even feel hungry though she knew she had to eat. She was staring at the limited selection in her refrigerator when she remembered the three pieces of leftover pizza from Dr. Everett's impromptu party, which she'd frozen. The smell as they thawed and warmed in her microwave brought back pleasant memories. With a can of soda she managed to find in the back of her refrigerator and the pizza, Dana settled back to watch a video of a Hallmark Hall of Fame presentation which she'd taped months before but never had time to view. Soda, pizza and decent mind candy... but Dana found it impossible to concentrate. The soda was flat, the pizza soft and slightly freezer-burned, and the people in the story had problems that made hers seem depressingly trivial by comparison. The soda went down the sink, the pizza in the trash and the tape back on the pile with the others she'd never watched. Unable to think of anything better to do, she stripped off her clothes and crawled into bed. Somewhere too close to her ear and too early, a phone rang. Dana moaned and groped for the receiver on the night stand, not bothering to turn on the light or even to open her eyes for that matter. She didn't need to see to know that it was still dark and that she had had less than three hours of sleep. Her REM cycle had a habit of letting her know when it had been rudely interrupted. Waking was harder than she remembered. She really must be out of practice. During med school she'd been able to wake in the middle of the night and actually be able to function within seconds. If this was an automated phone solicitation, someone was going to die. Fumbling with the receiver, Dana muttered something totally unrecognizable. "Agent Scully?" a voice on the other end of the line asked. Dana was instantly awake. She didn't recognize the voice immediately, but this was obviously work related. "Yes? This is Agent Scully." "Walter Skinner." Most of the muscles in Dana's body went rigid. Skinner was calling her at - Dana stared at the clock showing it was not yet one a.m. Suddenly she felt deathly cold. Mulder? Why else would they be calling her? Had something happened to Mulder? No, couldn't be. He was sitting in a nice, safe office writing a profile, not out on a raid or a stakeout. Involuntarily huddling deeper under the covers as if that could alleviate her chill, Dana managed to ask, "What can I do for you, sir?" "There's been another incident. The body was found just a couple of hours ago." Dana tried to swallow. 'A couple of hours'? No wonder she hadn't heard. "The Hunter's M.O.?" "How did you guess." That makes eight, Dana thought. Just what they all needed to improve the mood around the office. For they all felt it, even at the Academy. The hottest cases always made good jumping off points for almost any classroom work. The pressure Mulder must be feeling Dana didn't even want to think about. "I'm sorry to hear that, sir." "Not half as sorry as the unit is. We need an autopsy now. I have Blevins's okay to ask for your assistance." 'To ask for your assistance.' That was how he had put it. So this was a request, not an order, and there was only one reason why they should be so solicitous. "What about Mulder?" "We have no choice. Every other M.E. associated with this case has been pulling double duty as it is." A pause. Skinner did not sound happy. He clearly did not like having to bring her in and countermand one of his own decisions. "Word has it that you're very good." Word from whom? Dana wondered, and why the flattery? Did he think she would refuse? Did they think that she would let the fact that Mulder's considerable nose might get bent out of joint deter her? Associate Director Skinner didn't know Dana Scully very well, not yet anyway. "He'll find out," she warned. "Then he'll have to deal with that, won't he?" A few minutes later after they had discussed details, Dana slipped out of bed into the cool room and rapidly began to dress. There was no rush, the dead would wait, they always waited, but this new victim bothered her - that and Mulder's reaction to it. She couldn't get out of her mind the expression in Mulder's eyes as he had risen from his brief examination of the body of the beast woman as she lay in the blood-splattered leaves. Something very much like betrayal. Mulder hated to lose. This would be a similar blow. No, this one would be worse. He had been given time to stop it and he had failed. This was the second death that had occurred since Mulder had been pulled onto the case so he had failed not just once but twice. If one counted the poor 'devil', which Mulder would, that made three deaths in just ten days laid out at his door. * * * * * * * * Quantico Friday, October 20, 1993 3 a.m. Driving to Quantico at an hour of the morning before even the earliest commuters had ventured out, gave Dana the oddest feeling. It was like flying through a wilderness of shining black asphalt and glaringly bright white arc lamps. No traffic at all. The trip would almost have been enjoyable, except for its purpose. The Army's morgue was not the place Dana would have chosen to perform the autopsy, but the District officials had begged. Anything to divert the hordes of reporters for at least a little while. Everything was ready in the great, echoing room by the time she arrived. As she reverently drew back the sheet from the Hunter's latest victim, Dana was struck by how quiet it was. Morgues were usually quiet places but not like this silence which stretched for the entire building and most of the grounds. The body was that of a well-built male with the salt and pepper hair of late middle age. In life he must have been an handsome man. Dana stood for a second in silent prayer as she always did before she beginning her examination. Today, however, her meditation had more form than substance. She found herself listening for footsteps. No matter how hard she tried, however, she couldn't coax any from the silence. Where was Mulder? She expected him. He did a poor job of hiding how squeamish he could get during her autopsies, but he could usually be found hovering somewhere nearby. She had just started recording her external observations when she heard the sound of the electronic tumblers in the outer door lock, then the sound of two people approaching. "Dr. Scully? I have a visitor for you." Even though her stomach clenched with some apprehension over how awkward it would be meeting again after this last tense week, Dana's eyes lighted over the edge of her mask. "About time, Mulder," she grumbled under her breath. But the man shown into the room by the security guard was not Mulder. Dana's empty stomach unclenched so rapidly that she felt slightly nauseous. She found herself staring at a broad- shouldered, thick-set man of about her father's age with thinning hair and a strong odor of cigars about his rumpled suit. "Sorry to be late. Car wouldn't start," the man apologized. He held out a hand, realized she was gloved and pulled it back with some embarrassment. "Bill Hennessy, but everyone calls me Bull." Looking at the thickness of his neck, Dana could imagine why. His nose was also quite distinctive. The man probably boxed in his youth and lost often. "Dana Scully." "So The Skin informs me." "I take it you're on this case?" She inclined her head towards the body. "If he's one of that bastard's new prizes, yeah, I am. From the on-site examination we're almost sure he is." Dana found herself asking a little lamely. "Are you the only one coming from the team?" "The only one who hasn't been up for the last three nights running." Then Mulder wasn't coming. The sickness rolled around a little more in Dana's stomach. Blanking her mind of everything but the job, always relieved the sensation. So did adding a little anger to the mix. How had she ever allowed what Fox Mulder said or didn't say, or what Mulder did or didn't do, get so under her skin? "Any background you want to give me before I get started?" she asked her only companion for the night - her only companion other than the poor corpse. "Not at this time," Bull rumbled matter-of-factly. An old hand at this sort of thing, he had come supplied with an extra large coffee and a bag of donuts from the '7-11', the all pervasive local convenience store chain. He'd already slid a spare chair over by the door. He'd be close enough to hear her comments intended for the official recorder, but not too close. He'd also be within easy reach of the wall phone. "You're not going to tell me anything?" Dana asked. "Nothing about what I should be looking for? Nothing about the other victims? All I know about this case is what I've read in the papers." "Sorry, but that's the way they want it. A clean slate. Just do the most thorough job you've ever done in your career. We need a break. Bad." Dana turned back to the table and stared down at this meaningless death. It was going to be a long night. A clean slate? That had an empty sound. As empty as Mulder's not bothering to take the time to come down to see her. No more thinking about Mulder, Dana decided. He was probably off somewhere sulking because his divine wishes had been overruled and she'd been brought in after all. Ungrateful, stubborn man! With respect, Dana removed the sheet from the victim which had covered him from midchest down. Dana had already steeled herself for what she might find under the sheet. The newspaper reports did not make for pleasant bedtime reading. Even without them, she would have been warned by the sheer powder-white of the victim's skin. There was a harsh violent slice through the skin from just below the xiphoid process at the end of the sternum to the crotch. At least her work would be abbreviated. The abdominal cavity was completely empty. Not only empty but nearly pristine. Almost as an after thought, Dana noticed a pale bruise on the side of the victim's chest wall, below and to the left of the heart. She would look at that more closely later. Unbidden, the memory of other injury on another man's ribcage came to mind. It had been a ten days. She wondered who Mulder had gotten to change his bandages? * * * * * * Dana finished recording her external examination. Out of the corner of her eye she had been aware of Bull listening intently. She caught the nods and the frowns and found herself following up and double checking if a particular observation seemed to bother or excite him. It was all she had to go by. When she paused to retrieve her instruments, Bull reached up for the phone. Dana took her time so she could overhear. The call was not to Mulder but concerned him. "No, I haven't told Mulder yet.... " Bull's voice grumbled defensively. "Well, he says he's going to finish the next go round of the profile tonight and I didn't want to break his - concentration.... Yeah, I know he'll be pissed if he doesn't get all the information but this looks so cut and dried... Okay, okay, already, I'll call him." So, Mulder didn't even know about this new victim yet, and didn't know about her. Whether that was good or bad, Dana didn't know, but under the circumstances she certainly couldn't blame him anymore for his absence. Why did that sooth a multitude of hurts? Of course, it also meant that the storm was yet to come. Bull punched in a new number, supposedly a call to Mulder. Dana stood poised over the body, a scalpel in her hand. She pretended to be distracted by something about the victim's head. The phone must have rung for a LONG time before Bull muttered. "Come on, Spook, you bastard, pick up the phone. I'm not doing this for my.... Mulder? .... Yeah, Bull... look sorry to disturb you but the Hunter's done another one... When? Found 11:45 this evening. Rock Creek Park near the zoo..." A long pause, Bull sputtering towards the end trying to get a word in. "Hey... Hey... cool down, you shit, don't yell at me... I'm only the messenger boy here... Yeah, well, I'm here with the M.E. now. It's almost done. Yeah, it's our boy. I'm sure... Who? I don't know, but she's young, she's short, she's cute and she came highly regarded... Yeah, from the Skin himself... Is she who? How should I remember? I'm awful with names." The big man went flipping vainly though the little notebook he carried. "All right, all right, already I'll ask." Putting his hand over the mouth piece, Bull raised his voice, "He wants to know if you're 'Scully'." Dana nodded, smiling to herself as she shaved a part of the skull. With a description like that no wonder Mulder had guessed. Not that many young, short, female M.E.s on the East Coast. The cute part she could have done without, though. She certainly doubted that Mulder would have noticed anyway. He barely noticed she was female, but he couldn't help but notice she was short. "So you're going to take her word for the report... you don't want her at the briefing... I don't know if that's your decision to make, Mulder. I think Benchley will want to drag her in just like all the others..." A long pause. "Well, EXCUUUUSE me for breathing, Mr. Oxford graduate Ph.D, but you set up the procedures so we stick with them. She comes, *comprende*?" Bull swore as he hung up the phone. "Sorry for swearing but our profilist is a little tense right now. He says he knows you. Funny, he doesn't think it necessary that you come to the briefing tomorrow, but our M.E.'s always do. In the past Mulder's always insisted on it so he can grill you people with a lot of creepy questions." Scully felt the anger beginning to rise again. Damn him anyway for still trying to keep her out of this. "Mulder will get over it," she said, with more ice than she intended. A baffled look came over Bull's face. "I'm glad you think so. I don't like to be on the losing end of that temper unless I need to be. Do you know what else is odd? Under most circumstances old Spook would be down here in about fifteen minutes to breathe down your neck. He didn't seem eager to do that this time, did he? Not that Benchley would let him." Bull pulled a sugar donut out his paper sack. "I think Benchley's got our pet psycho on a chain until the profile's done." Dana felt a chill run down her back which had nothing to do with the cold body laid out before her. * * * * * * * * It was a special case and Dana took extra care. She needed to be right on this, absolutely right. She'd show Mulder just how much of a mistake it had been to ship her off to Quantico. By the time the body was shelved and the report of the gross anatomical findings had been drafted and filed, the first lab results began to filter in. Tired as she was, Dana stayed. So did Bull, though he'd found the doctor's lounge and was sawing some significantly noisy Z's. Dana finally nudged the VCS representative awake at ten-fifteen. Time to head back into the city for their meeting with the rest of team at eleven. When Bull's car failed to start again, Dana drove them both. This suited Bull well because that meant he could read her report as she drove which he should have done hours before. There had been almost a guilty look in his eye when she'd nudged him awake. Dana got the impression that no one on the team was expected to have the time for sleep. Under normal circumstances Dana couldn't say that she would be looking forward to this briefing. A roomful of cranky, testosterone-laden males all stressed-out from having played King of the Hill all week without anyone coming out on top? "I can hardly wait," Dana sighed inaudibly as she drove up Interstate 395 towards downtown D.C.. Part of her, however, was eager to strut her stuff. The examination of the body had provided a lot of data but without the files on the other victims they were just random facts about one particular death. Once she had access to the background materials, however... Dana began to see the intrigue surrounding the investigation of those rare creatures, the serial killer. Sitting beside her, muttering, smiling, moaning, and occasionally slapping his knee as he read her draft and the lab findings, Bull was doing a good job of raising Dana's own particular level of stress. The hardest part was wondering whether what she had found was going to be of any use to a certain someone. Friday, 10:55 a.m. Dana had not been in the downtown VCS annex often. Most of the teams Dana had worked with in the past either accepted the lab and M.E. reports without comment or, if they had questions, met her at the morgue or called her on the phone with additional questions. The rather well-worn and slovenly appearance to the desks and the drab army-green of the general decor definitely stamped this as a male-dominated sanctum. Dana knew women had entered its ranks but it was assumed that those who did had better be prepared to be treated just as crudely as any of the 'boys'. At least it was a first step. Dana knew all about hidden hoops and glass ceilings. She had faced similar problems in forensics. Enlightenment would come in time. As they neared the conference room, Bull's beeper chirped. He glanced at the tiny digital readout and swore. "Damn, it's Betty. She probably wants to make sure I haven't died." The big man frowned at the closed double doors that marked what had been their destination, then indicated a row of chairs along the wall. "Guess we're back to back with another meeting for use of the room. In that case, I really need to make a call home or the next time I see Betty will be in divorce court. If the room opens up while I'm gone, Dr. Scully, would you mind waiting? I want to bring you in myself. Sometimes these sessions require a delicate touch." Dana sat and Bull trudged off to find a phone. For Mulder's sake she would play nice though she doubted that any meeting between Mulder, and the kind of he-man VC team to which men like Bull Hennessy belonged, could ever be considered 'delicate' any more than a sledge hammer could be considered delicate. The minutes passed. Dana fidgeted. She leaned down once to assure herself that her brief case containing her notes was still beside her chair. Why was Bull taking so long? She was eager to get moving. Maybe she was just eager to get this strained first meeting with Mulder over with. Eleven days ago today he had asked her - TOLD her - to accept a temporary assignment. Eleven days ago today they had said some cruel things to each other. Eleven days ago today she had walked out without looking back. Well, she was back and like it or not there was nothing Mulder could do about it. Unconsciously, Dana found herself trying to listen in on the meeting which was going on in the conference room for which she and Bull were waiting. There were several different voices - four at least, probably more - but all at the moment were low and muffled. Suddenly the noise level rose significantly. Almost immediately the doors burst open and six men emerged almost in a herd. Most headed for the facilities. As it was nearly eleven, which was when their briefing was scheduled, Dana assumed that this was the previous meeting just getting out. None of the six, however, had carried out brief cases, files or notes. Curious, Dana rose. A glance inside showed a level of disarray only found after a working meeting had been in session for hours and was not finished yet. Dana returned to her seat a little bewildered. Then she realized that she had recognized one of the six who had thundered past her. The broad-shouldered, greying black man was Ralph Benchley, a veteran D.C. detective who had recently joined the FBI and whom everyone called 'Captain'. Bull had mentioned that he was the team leader on this investigation. She had only seen the man before in the background at some of the evidence gathering sessions she had participated in over the years. Bull would be furious. It seemed that the festivities had started much earlier than he'd been led to believe. Dana sat as she had been told and listened, far easier now with the door open and the members of the team scattered in the hallways and still talking at the top of their lungs. Being a fly on the wall was sometimes the best way to pick up information and she wanted some idea of what she was getting into before she walked through that door. She heard a lot of grumbling about getting up early. It seemed that this was a night group who worked until nearly dawn and then slept and they had not gotten nearly enough downtime the night before. Dana couldn't help but be aware that one critical element of the team was suspiciously missing. Though her glance had be quick, her impression of the meeting room was of lots of clutter, files and empty coffee cups but no people. Where was Mulder? End of Chapter 5 REVELATIONS 1: DAWN 6/30) by Sue Esty (AKA Windsinger@aol.com) Begun 7/95, completed 6/98 For Disclaimer see chapter 1 Chapter 6 Friday, 11:05 a.m. 'Captain' Ralph Benchley barreled down the hall trying not to spill the two cups of steaming coffee he carried. As he neared the conference room, he noticed a new addition. A classically striking red head was perched on one of the chairs outside. She glanced his way expectantly as he neared. Nice, very nice, he thought. Perfect skin. The secretarial pool had outdone itself this time. "Sorry no one told you," he said before she could speak. "The meeting was moved up. We're on break right now, but we'll be recapping. Those are the notes we're most interested in getting down anyway. Just stick to the facts and don't elaborate. Oh, and if you feel sick, there's no need to ask permission, just leave. If you've not been to one of these sessions before, the details can get pretty gruesome, but you'll get used to it." At that moment a new male voice began speaking nearby which forced Benchley to turn away from the woman, leaving her with her lovely mouth slightly agape. The newcomer, an tall man with a bony face who looked even taller than he was because of his incredible thinness, had coffee in one hand and a danish in the other. The scarecrow gestured with his coffee cup towards the room. "What's up with the Spook today anyway? He's raving even worse than usual. He's pushing us through this like he needs to get to a fire or something. I know he's leaving me in the dust." Benchley answered, unhappily, "Skinner called me this morning and warned me that this might happen. This is why I'm making him go over everything at least twice. If I get away without claw marks on my throat, I'll feel myself fortunate. The M.E. they had to pull in last night for the new case is Mulder's new partner. He's only had her a few weeks." Scarecrow relaxed. "So that's it. Doesn't want her subjected to the full effect? Hard enough to work with someone day in and day out without their having that kind of ammunition. Hey, I'll bet Blevins hooked him up with one of those ex-army fems the military coerced us into hiring recently. I swear one of them looks like my old drill sergeant in skirts. Now she'd whip Mulder's ass into shape." "Well, we'll know pretty soon," Benchley said. "She's coming in with Bull. I don't know where he's been. Either they had trouble with the autopsy or Bull didn't get his wake up call." At that moment Bull flat-footed his way up the hall towards the other two. Dana only caught a glimpse of the burly agent because from where she sat she was almost completely hidden from view by Benchley's impressive bulk. Bull pounced. "What is this I hear about you scum starting at eight a.m.?" "Didn't you know? And here we thought you and the project's new M.E. were out late putting the finishing on a great night," the scarecrow drawled. "Spook got it into his head to start early and almost pulled each and every one of us out of the sack by our ears. We'd be done now if this trace evidence were more cut and dried. He didn't ask someone to page you?" "No, damn him! I should have guessed that he'd try something like this. You know, he doesn't want her here. Still, I've never known 'Willies' to out and out lie. Did he actually tell you he had me paged? The two looked at each other sheepishly. The scarecrow answered. "Ah, no, not that you mention it. He just sort of inferred." "Yeah, he's good at that. He slipped his leash on me twice during a case a couple of years ago with stories like that. I thought I warned you people!" Benchley frowned. "Cool it, Bull. You're here now and I assume she's here now. The fireworks will either start or they won't. She is with you, isn't she, Bull?" Bull looked around confused. Where had the woman gone? "What's she look like?" the scarecrow asked with a leer, peering expectantly over the other two and down the corridor. "We've got bets on this one." Dana stood and, back straight and head held high, slipped between the Bull's wide shoulders and the scarecrow's narrow ones. "She looks like this," Dana informed them in a tone as cold as ice. Though her head was barely even with Benchley's chin, Dana still gave the man the impression that, without even trying, she could stare him down to his knees. "Sorry to disappoint you, but I'm not here to take down your notes. You'll have to take them yourself." Holding herself in the same unyielding posture, Dana strode towards the conference room door well ahead of the men, leaving in her wake more than one dropped jaw. On the threshold she turned back, her voice lowering to a threatening whisper, "And don't any of you ever, EVER, call my partner anything other than Agent Mulder in my presence or you will learn first hand that my latest compulsories on the target range are higher than or equal to every man's in this room." Of the six men whom Dana had seen leave the conference room during the break, three had returned and three were sheepishly slinking in behind her. As she swung her brief case up onto the least cluttered spot at the table, Dana let her chill gaze sweep the room. Too bad that her cool demeanor was surface only. Underneath she was anything but cool. The room was unnaturally gloomy. Three quarters of the fluorescent tubes had been loosened and were dark behind their water-stained diffusion panels. The effect significantly added to the number and depth of the shadows. Was this Mulder's idea? Atmosphere for getting into the rhythm of the case or just providing lots of places to hide? Clearly none of the seven men she had already seen - the six from the morning meeting plus Bull - were Mulder. 'Places to hide...?' only with that thought did Dana detect the dark, glowering presence leaning against the far wall in the made-to-order shadows. *That* must be her partner. Or... used to be her partner. Dana had no idea where she stood now. She could only cling to the memory of what had seemed like a mild panic registering on Mulder's face when she had asked whether he ever wanted to work with her again. Later after her anger had cooled somewhat, she had replayed that scene, wishing fervently that she had Mulder's talent for perfect recall. Her instincts told her now that he had been sincere and she had begun to feel uncomfortable over words she had said in anger. Over the days of silence, however, that thin faith had begun to seem more and more insubstantial. And now to add to her confusion this... these men... this table with its heaps of files, dozens of empty coffee cups, soda cans, fast food wrappers and empty donut boxes... this locker room smell of stale male sweat and wool and tobacco... Dana was mystified. Wrong, all wrong! This place was not Mulder. This... melting pot of macho male steroids! It would take more evidence than she had seen thus far to convince her that he would prefer THIS to working with her for all their scrapping and snapping at each other from time to time. Benchley sat down at the head of the table before an impressive stack of files and a yellow legal pad covered with notes. He nodded to Dana uncomfortably. "Dr. Scully, I apologize. It's unfortunate that we didn't meet under better circumstances." To the group he continued, "Gentlemen, at least to those of you who are gentleman, this is Dr. Scully. She performed the autopsy on our latest victim. Dr. Scully, as you might have gathered, I'm Special Agent Ralph Benchley, but people call me 'Captain'. Bull, you two met early this morning as I understand it. To Bull's right," Benchley meant the scarecrow man, "is Special Agent Thompson, you'll hear him referred to as 'Crow'. Next to him around the room is Agent Limelighter, Agent Hubert and our representatives from the D.C. police department, Detective Sergeants Morrow and Engles. And hiding down there in the dark is our profilist, Special Agent Mulder, whom I believe you know. Spoo- er - Mulder, would you PLEASE be so kind to join the group?" At the mention of Mulder's name Benchley's tone had changed subtlety, taking on the deprecating sing song cadence some people use when speaking to young children. There was a significant pause before the darkest of the shadows moved. The figure seemed to need to push off from the wall to get started. At the foot of the table near that shadowed end of the room was one empty chair before which was strewn the most haphazard collection of crime photos, snapped pencils and scribbled sheets of half-crumbled paper. The figure moved stiffly, placing one palm on the table top for support before dropping rather gracelessly into the chair. Dana raised her eyes and tried not to stare, but even by concentrating she still couldn't make out his expression. His head was bowed and the shadows too concealing. Worse, to her knowledge he had failed to look in her direction once since she had entered the room. "Dr.Scully," Benchley began before Mulder was even completely seated, "will you give us your report?" Almost with relief Dana turned to work, snapping open her brief case to retrieve her notes and the lab reports. "Before we start," Dana said, "I want to state for the record that I was not given access to the reports on the previous victims -" One of the group made a sound that might have been words if the person's throat had been working correctly. The sounds were repeated, stronger this time. It was Mulder who had spoken but not with any voice Dana had ever heard from him before. "At my request." "May I asked why, Agent Mulder?" Dana inquired formally, trying to keep the arctic chill out of her voice, but aware she was not succeeding. The voice went on in the same mechanical tone. "Two days ago I asked Associate Director Skinner to find an M.E. for the next victim who hadn't been involved in the case before. We needed some new eyes on this case. There must be evidence the other autopsies haven't revealed. I didn't expect another... death... so soon. Nor did I expect you would become involved." The lifeless voice had become tinged with irritation, but whether towards her, or Skinner, or Fate, who knew. "There was no one else available," Dana countered, "and I assure you, Agent Mulder, that I performed my duties to the best of my ability. Need I remind you that to my knowledge you have had no cause to fault those abilities until now?" The severity of her words seemed to stun him. For the first time since he had come into the room the dark figure raised his head though his face was still in shadow. "And I have no reason to doubt them now, Agent Scully." Dana tried not to stare, honestly tried not to, but suddenly she had to know. Something was wrong here, very wrong. The silence, the tension, the way Mulder moved, the sound of his voice. After looking from one partner to the other with some irritation, Benchley finally broke the silence, but his words had no calming effect. "If you two are finished, I suggest we move on. Crow, why don't you recap for Dr. Scully. Then she'll see what we're looking for." The scarecrow grunted unhappily as if he thought the repetition a waste of time. "The basics you've read in the 'Washington Post' I'm sure. The first victim was found about six months ago. A young father, Emilio Avante, early thirties, dressed in an expensive jogging suit, went missing while on his daily run in Greenbelt Park in Prince Georges County. Two days later he was found in Montgomery County in Wheaton Park, beaten to death. Odd sort of beating." At a flicker of the gaunt man's eyes towards his superior, Benchley handed Dana the relevant file. "The wounds were rough and very irregular. Crushing injuries mostly. Not made by any single instrument. Consensus is he was most likely stoned and/or clubbed to death over an extended period of time. Internal bleeding killed him eventually, either that or the cerebral hemorrhage which followed a skull fracture. The M.E. couldn't be certain. "The next victim we knew about was found almost four weeks later. Another male, forty-five, slightly over weight. John Forestman. Crushing injuries plus violently flayed with a whip this time. Crude work. The whip may have been recently acquired by our killer." "Or never tried on a moving target before," the young agent Limelighter offered. "That was clear from the autopsies. During their torture, the battered victims were allowed freedom of motion. They can tell from..." the young agent's voice faded out. "But then you probably know how they determine that." Crow tapped the table top with a long, thin finger. "I think she does, Ronnie. To return to new developments, this time the victim was thoroughly washed after death." Crow glanced at the Limelighter, relinquishing the floor. "Which is how I got brought in," Limelighter explained. "I was given a case a couple of weeks ago. A male in his early twenties had been found in Great Falls Park also wearing the remnants of an expensive jogging suit. Peter Grimson. Wrestler. A varsity letter yet. This poor bastard had really been tortured. Even for D.C., the variety and severity of his injuries is almost unprecedented. To make matters even more gruesome, he had been disemboweled and the abdominal and thoracic cavities thoroughly cleaned out. So I was working up this case and there are no leads. One day while a few of us were sitting around the office shootin' the shit, Crow and I started comparing odd points of each others' cases and - " "And we got suspicious," Crow interrupted. "Serial killers just are not this clean, not as a rule. They like to leave a terrifying signature. But what we did find was that we now had three bodies, all abducted while wearing distinctive jogging suits, all tortured to death in a very violent manner, all murdered at some unknown location, all but the first washed of all trace evidence, and all dumped miles from where they had been abducted but in locations where they were obviously meant to be found sooner or later." Bull was silently drumming his thick fingers, his impatience probably due to their certainly having been over this ground innumerable times before. "What they're saying Dr. Scully is that we wanted very much to find a pattern in all this and it - almost - fit, all except for the minor detail of the 'method of execution' and that's a big 'except'. Death by beating is nothing like a knife thrust straight down your sternum. As I'm certain you know, serial killers - if they are found at all - are usually found by looking at the details of their work." "I see your problem," Dana said thoughtfully. "There's no clear pattern in the way the victims were killed - but considering the other factors you took a leap of logic and put them together anyway." "Unfortunately, we were right," Bull said. "Twenty days after the discovery of John Forestman, who we were now calling the third victim, we found the fourth. A young woman this time. More similar to John Forestman than the two previous. Some crushing injuries plus the use of the whip. Washed. We thought the perp had found his stride. "When we found the fifth we were even more certain. An older man, seventy-three, in excellent condition. Prodigious use of the whip again and it was being wielded with increasing skill as morbid as that may sound. But we weren't getting anywhere in the case. Nada. The bodies were piling up and the press getting hot." "That's when SOME of us..." Crow's eye stabbed towards Bull "... started thinking that maybe we should get Spooky on the team. At the time he was out of town." Benchley's disapproving frown at the use of the derogatory label didn't get through to Crow. Thompson was too wrapped up in his own synopsis. "We concentrated on finding out which known violent criminals were in the area or which might have transferred in recently from outside." Crow shook his bony head. "Waste of time. Dead end." Limelighter came in again. "Fourteen days later the DC park police found the sixth victim. That really shook us up. Female... thirty... but her death was completely different. Someone had just coolly hung her up by her arms and slit her down the front. We're certain she was hung up because of the abrasions on her wrists. Why go back to the work he had done on number two? Even more - where was the torture ritual from all of the other deaths? There was a lot of panic that day," the young agent admitted. "I don't know about panic, but we certainly weren't any closer to finding our guy," Crow admitted," and we were getting murdered by Congress and the District mayor's office and the press. Then we heard that Spoo-" Bull coughed loud and rudely. Dana caught a quick exchange between the scarecrow and Bull. "Anyway, the Captain here went to Skinner and asked him to snag Mulder for us since he was back in town." "Help didn't come fast enough, though," Bull remarked bitterly. "Five days later the Hunter gave us number seven. Middle aged woman... forty five... overweight. In the worst shape physically of any of the others before her abduction. Her jogging suit still had some of its tags. She was murdered again in the manner of the original pattern." "Not disemboweled then like the woman before?" Dana asked. "That's right. The whip again as well as a lot of blunt trauma. Sticks and stones." Crow sighed and threw the notes he had been looking at back onto the pile in front of him. "And that's all there is, until our number Eight last night." There was a brief pause. A sort of raspy, wheezing sort of sound came from the distant end of the table. "May we hear your findings now, Dr. Scully?" Dana turned her head slowly. She felt like she was suddenly on stage. She knew all eyes were on her, but at the moment hers were only for the dark presence sitting alone, isolated, at the end of the table. The pen nearly dropped from her suddenly numb fingers. Mulder was looking right at her for the first time. Even taking into account the distance and poor lighting, Mulder had never appeared to her so totally wasted, not even after Ellens. Only his eyes were alive in that gray face and their light was more like that from dying coals than anything living. It made sense now. Mulder was ill. Didn't any of the others see that? What was he doing here? He should be home in bed if not in a hospital. But Dana knew that was impossible. The killer had to be caught, that was the job. Besides, by the turning of the cold knot in her stomach, Dana suspected that what was wrong with Mulder went far deeper than lack of sleep, poor diet and stress. She knew how obsessive he could be towards his beloved X-Files. Whatever made her think that that self-destructive character trait would not bleed over into other areas? Even to cases he detested? "Dr. Scully?" This came from Bull, the request wrenching her out of her escalating concern for Mulder. She looked towards the old boxer. There was a kindliness in his eyes. Patience. He knew what she was seeing when she looked at her partner and knew she was finding it a shock. "I've scanned your draft and I think these gentleman will all be *very* interested in your autopsy results from last night." Wrenching her attention away from the figure at the end of the table, Dana began her report, referring only occasionally to her notes. "Much of this will be of no surprise to you. On the other hand there are some new elements." She scanned the room one more time before beginning. "The victim is a Causation male in his early fifties, six foot three inches in height; weight, two hundred twelve. The body was presented in a curled position, head severely bent towards his chest. Assumption is that he was placed in the trunk of a car before rigor mortis set in which would have been within four to six hours after his murder." Dana slowly drew in a breath. "The immediate cause of death was exsanguination following a controlled incision beginning under the left ribs and directed upwards to nick the descending aorta. The force of the blood pressure would have caused him to pump out a third of his blood volume, if not more, within the first thirty seconds. Unconsciousness would have come even more quickly." "Excuse me, Dr. Scully," Benchley interrupted obviously confused, "but the police report describe victim Eight as resembling victims Two and Six - slashed upwards from bowel to sternum." "To them it appeared so. True, the victim was mutilated in that way - the abdominal and thoracic cavities were cleaned of organs - but only after death," Dana emphasized. "If a wound such as you described were performed initially, the victim would have died almost immediately and I would have found pooling of the blood in the extremities because there would have been no time for it to have pumped out before the heart stopped. I saw none of that here." Dana looked from her notes to the team leader, Benchley, but first she let her eyes slide towards Mulder to see if he was listening. He was, leaning forward in his chair, elbows on the table. His hands were alternately clasped and twisted in front of him. Whether he was leaning forward in order to use the table for support so he wouldn't fall over, Dana couldn't say, but there was a slight spark in the burnt out hollows of eyes which hadn't been there before. Their eyes even met and in the contact she found some hope. She saw there no anger or resentment for her presence. Then she realized that there never had been. He had only wanted her away from this hot, smelly room and from whatever had eaten or was eating him alive. With that realization every trace of her days-old resentment faded away as if it had never been. Benchley looked glumly through the new report. "That's all we need... another variation. Nothing like this was reported by any of the other M.E.'s. This incision under the ribs - could other examiners have missed it?" "Possible but not likely. The only reason this was missed as long as it was was because of the severity of the major trauma." "We'll need to check in any case. Thompson, get in touch with the other M.E.'s and specifically ask if they saw anything like this. Until we hear otherwise we'll assume this is new. What about beatings, Dr. Scully, and other damage to the body?" "The wrists showed severe contusions, as if the hands were tied or chained. The wrist bones were partially pulled out of alignment. The shoulder, elbow and wrist joints all show stress trauma. Like your other young woman, number Six, this man was hung by his wrists while alive and it was while in this position that he received the thrust to the heart, initially from a thin sharp blade. He was disemboweled while in the same position." "Why the change in M.O.?" one of the District detectives asked. "Why do these perps do anything they do?" Crow grumbled. "I thought that was why we brought Mulder in." Doing her best to ignore Crow's slur, Dana sorted quickly through the other case files. They were color coded in at least a dozen ways for different traits. She summarized as she scanned. "There are males and females in both categories. And it's not body type dependent either. Thin, bulky, tall and short, athletic and not. It doesn't matter - " Dana paused. "The women weren't molested?" That brought Bull to attention. "No." "Were the men?" There was a short uncomfortable silence. "A fair question," Bull piped in in support. "No, Dr. Scully. No, they weren't." More silence. Dana knew they were still waiting for the rest of her findings but she had more questions of her own to ask first. "And a shorter time after each eviscerated victim than the next?" "Doesn't she catch on fast," Thompson murmured sarcastically, again directing his comment towards Mulder before turning back to the cool woman to his left. "Of course, what that means is that he's probably going to strike again and soon." Benchley was wiping his sweaty face with a huge handkerchief. "Afraid so. We've got all the parks staked out but we can't have a man on every footpath. Northwest Washington and nearby Maryland and Virginia have hundreds of square miles of green space. The public has also been warned that if they have to run or bike, they should do so in pairs. Victim Six had been running with a friend, but they separated just before she was picked off. Victim Seven probably thought she was safe because she was not the fine svelte image of a runner that the paper is playing up. Unfortunately, the press is wrong in many respects - as usual." "What we need is some idea of WHY he does the murders," Limelight said with the passion of the young. "This man's Mr. Clean routine is giving us nothing to go on except that he may not be happy about his crime. Otherwise, why all the water, the washing? Do you have anything that can help understand all this?" By the tone of his voice, Limelighter wasn't very optimistic. "Not 'why'," Dana told them, opening her report folder. "That's the specialty of your profilist." Her eyes lifted towards the dark knot of limbs at the end of the table which was Mulder. Unlike that of Crow and to some extent Limelighter, her expression had been intended to radiate confidence. "I may, however, be able to help with the 'where'." Every man in the room straightened in this chair. Even Mulder. "As I've stated, the time of death for Victim Eight was less than twelve hours from the time he was found. Because rigor mortis set in while he was curled forward, he was, in a way, protecting his own worst injuries until his body was found. It's fortunate that there has been no rain in the past twenty-four hours. Because he was exsanguinated pretty thoroughly as he died, bleeding after death was kept at a minimum. Then, as you know, his internal cavities were washed completely. I believe I can make a good case that the fluid that had not drained from his abdominal cavity consists primarily of the water with which he was washed. No results yet but I've sent a sample to the lab." The senior agents passed glances of restrained excitement. Limelighter spoke first. "The perp, of course, got the water from where the murder was committed. He could have trucked it in, but what would be the point of that? You think you can tell District water from Maryland water from Northern Virginia water?" Dana cocked her head at the question, internally elated at the quiet stir her news had caused. Wait till she dropped the next bomb. Mulder had even come out from behind the shadows long enough to nod in her direction. "Maryland and Virginia suburb water less so, but the District is currently under court order to increase the level of chlorine because of an infestation of Giardia." "I thought chlorine naturally escaped into the air upon standing?" This question came from the other young agent, Hubert. "So it does, but at a standard rate depending upon temperature and other conditions. We can extrapolate with fair certainty back to the original concentration. There are other differences. Levels of lime and other minerals, for example, that are different in the different reservoirs as well as nanogram residues from the effects of specific water treatment facilities." "We're still talking about a pretty large area though," Benchley reminded everyone. Dana raised an eyebrow and wondered if the man was peeved because his own team of experts had failed to come up with even this much. "True, but it's a start." Dana couldn't restrain herself. She paused just a beat before adding," I did find one other item..." Benchley's scribbling pen stopped as he glowered over at her. "Are you playing with us, Agent Scully?" "Never, sir." Far on the other side of the room, Dana saw a flash. Mulder's teeth in the dim light. It was probably meant to be a smile but came out more like a grimace. Dana found little comfort in it but at least it was something. End of Chapter 6