From: jennyann@ix.netcom.com (Jennifer Lyon)
Newsgroups: alt.tv.x-files.creative
Subject: "Safe Haven" 1/5
Date: 28 May 1995 18:56:56 GMT


"Safe Haven"
An X-Files Story 
by Jennifer Lyon
Jenni10647@aol.com
JennyAnn@ix.netcom.com
-----------------------------------------------------------
Disclaimer: The X-Files, and all rights thereto, are the property 
of FOX network, 1013Productions, and Chris Carter. The 
remainder of this story is the property of the author.  I do not 
pretend to any knowledge regarding the Navajo culture and 
religion. I am simply using the locale David Duchovny and Chris 
Carter left us in at the end of "Anasazi." Basically, my Navajo 
scenes have absolutely NO relationship to anything real, as far as 
I know, and I mean no disrespect. I'm just too lazy to go the 
library and look it up. :-)  This story starts right at the end of 
"Anasazi":
-----------------------------------------------------------

Farmington, New Mexico

	The words blurred.  Agent Dana Scully leaned back in 
her chair and sighed.  Even in an air conditioned motel, the New 
Mexico sunlight was a force to be reckoned with.  It beat 
mercilessly through the windows, weaved its way through the 
drapes, glared off the papers and drew beads of moisture on her 
skin.  Getting up from her chair, she headed to the bathroom to 
seek the relief of some cold water. She was still worried about 
the way Mulder's transmission had cut off, but all she could do 
was wait until help arrived.  Only the ones who had taken Mulder 
out there could bring her as well - as hard as it was to wait, she 
had no choice.  Venturing out into the desert without a guide was 
certain disaster.  She swallowed the fear and anguish, reaching 
out for the bathroom door.  But before she could step inside, the 
door opened and the old Navaho translator burst in.
	"Come quickly," Albert told her in a hard-edged voice, 
his aged features set in stone. Without question, she changed 
directions instantly, racing after him out into the parking lot, 
barely slowing down an instant as she was bathed in the direct 
heat of the midday sun.
	The trip out to the quarry was spent in silence, Scully 
was breathless, her heart racing.  Something had happened to 
Mulder, he was in danger, and she felt frustrated and scared. 
They had been through so much, he had suffered things no one 
should have to deal with, and now he was alone and hurt, maybe 
dead - she thrust that thought away fiercely, instead sending up a 
fervent prayer that she would get there fast enough.
	The truck bumped its way over rocks and sparse 
vegetation, Albert gripping the wheel with tense determination. 
Scully held on for dear life, as each jolt threatened to crash her 
skull against the roof, or throw her aching shoulder against the 
door. Finally, finally, they came skidding to a halt on the edge of 
an old quarry.  Racing out of the door, she came to the edge, 
only to see the black edges of smoke filtering up from the canyon 
below. Without waiting for her companion, she slipped and slid 
down, running up to the source of the fire.  She could see the 
dust-covered top of a buried metal object - the boxcar Mulder 
had mentioned over the phone.  	
	"Mulder, Mulder!!!!!" she cried out, hearing her voice 
echo back from the walls of the quarry.  But nothing answered 
but the wind and the sound of the fire burning below in the 
darkened car.  She leaned forward to try to see in, but was met a 
blast of heat and smoke, causing her to cough and shield her face.
	Trying to figure her next move, Scully was startled 
when Albert came up behind her.  The look on his face was full 
of sorrow and sympathy.
	"What happened!" she demanded. "Where is Mulder?"  
His mouth tightened and he shook his head.
	"No, DAMN YOU!" she shouted, following his eyes to 
the burning hole and back.  "NO!"
	She leapt to her feet and hollered at the sky, 
"MULDER!!!!!!!!!!!!"  There was nothing but the echoes and the 
wind.
					- - - - -

	The crevices in the rocks were tight, dipping at odd 
angles, making him bend himself through them, twisting and 
turning to seize the next handhold.  Sometimes, the space was so 
small, that he felt the very air being squeezed from his lungs, but 
inch-by-inch he pushed himself onward.  There was air here, so 
there must be a way out.  Images, nightmares, kept flashing in 
front of his mind - but he forced them down deep inside, focusing 
only on moving forward. Keep going, he just had to keep going. 
Concentrate on nothing else, except the need to keep crawling 
through the dark.
	It seemed ages, but at last he felt a brush of fresh air 
across his sweat and dirt encrusted face, and he bent upwards 
towards, blinking at the increased light.  Tears mixed with grime, 
causing muddy streaks to form along his raw and scraped cheeks, 
and he extended a swollen and bleeding hand towards the sun.  
With renewed determination, he pushed himself onward, at long 
last closing his hand around the rim, and crawling out into the 
afternoon sun.  The hole he came out of was on a hill-side, and 
the world tipped dangerously as he tried to stand up.  A cry 
escaping from his chapped lips, he tumbled down the rocky slope, 
head over heels, his scream torn away by the wind.
					- - - - -

	Kneeling by the edge of the car, the old Indian silent and 
respectful of her grief, Scully let the last of her tears drip down 
her cheeks.  Suddenly feeling an exhaustion so deep it penetrated 
her bones, she  stumbled to her feet.  Her companion reached out 
to take her arm, then froze as an abrupt scream split the air.  
Both spun, only to watch an object roll down the hillside, spitting 
loose boulders and dust to fall with it, until it came to a halt on 
the quarry floor and lay still.
	Scully raced over to it, drawing her gun out of pure 
reflex.  but as she came up beside the unconscious form, the 
weapon fell from her hand and she dropped to her knees.  Under 
the torn clothes, dirt, ashes and streaks of blood, was the battered 
body of a very familiar man.
	"Mulder?" her voice was soft and questioning, then 
again, "Mulder!" this time demanding.  His only response was a 
slight groan and shift, but it was enough to make her eyes blink in 
search of more tears.  Her emptied tear ducts squeezed out a 
couple of drops, but they were ignored as she reached out to 
gather him up in her arms.  Turning her head, she yelled at 
Albert, who standing behind her. "He's alive, get help!"
	Then she gave all her attention back to her wounded 
partner, sweeping the heavy black bangs back of his forehead, 
then caressing his cheek gently.  "He's alive."
					- - - - -

	Scully would never remember much of the trip back to 
the motel.  A couple of unknown faces, strong men with long 
black braids and embroidered shirts had lifted Mulder's body out 
of her arms and carried him up to the truck. The another pair 
lifted her, and half-carried, half-dragged her up the quarry wall.  
Then there was the return trip, a haze of jolting over rocks, 
feeling her heart constrict as each bump caused Mulder to cry out 
in barely conscious pain.  She had soothed him as best she could, 
holding him tight against her until they finally came to a stop.
	They had assisted her in getting him into the motel, then 
had faded into the background as she forced herself into medical 
mode, giving her silent assistance as she demanded it.  Soon, but 
not fast enough for her, Mulder was stripped and cleaned, towels 
and water turning black with filth.  But once it was cleared from 
his skin, she felt a sudden rush of relief.  Most of his injuries were 
surface, scrapes and bruises, cuts, and gouges, but nothing deep.  
Soon the oozing blood was cleared away too, and bandages were 
carefully applied to the worst of the wounds.
	He sighed and shifted but did not awaken, which began 
to worry her. Anxiously, she checked every inch of his scalp, 
threading her hands through his still-soft hair, but was unable to 
find any sign of injury.  Leaning back she watched him with 
bloodshot eyes, as he stirred and moaned, then lay still again.  
"Let him sleep now," came a voice and she pivoted in surprise.  
The old Indian's eyes were gentle as he laid a hand on her 
shoulder.
	"The Truth Seeker is simply exhausted, as are you. You 
both must rest now."
	"No, I...he..." Scully tried to speak the thoughts that 
raced through her mind, but she couldn't form the words, her 
tongue slipping in her mouth.
	"Sleep now," Albert told. "You'll be safe here." She 
shook her head at that, they weren't safe here or anywhere, but 
the strain of the past few days was taking its toll, and she could 
feel herself slipping downward.  Her eyes slid shut, and she barely 
noticed as she was lifted up and set down on the bed beside 
Mulder.
					- - - - -

	The room was lit by a small lamp as Scully awoke, her 
head nestled against something warm.  Memory flooded her, and 
she pulled to a sitting position, then reached to check on Mulder.  
He was sleeping peacefully, his breath coming evenly.  In the 
shadowed light, his face looked young and peaceful, the lines 
smoothed out, the pain gone, taking years with it.
	Movement just outside the edge of her vision caught her 
attention, and she turned with a gasp, then smiled at the now 
familiar face.
	"Here," Albert offered her a cup and she took it 
gratefully, sliding off the bed.  As she sipped at the hot coffee, 
feeling it warm her throat and belly, she stepped over to the 
window.  Looking out at the bright, moonlit night sky, she closed 
her eyes for a moment, then stared up at the old Indian.  "What 
happened?"
	"My grandson was the one who guided your partner out 
to the quarry.  He was picked up by some men in uniform. US 
Army.  They were looking for Mulder, who had gone into the 
boxcar. But they couldn't find him in there.  They forced Eric to 
go with them in their helicopter, then tossed a bomb into the car. 
They held him for several hours, then let him go."	
	"But if Mulder was in the car, then how did he survive?"  
	"There was an earthquake recently, which brought the 
car to the surface." He gestured widely, "The hills around here 
are honeycombed with passageways. Some too thin for a child to 
get through, others wide enough for a man to stand upright.  He 
must have found a way out though them."
	"Thank God," she breathed.  He nodded.
	"Your grandson, he's okay?"
	"Yes, he is fine.  He simply played the dumb Indian," 
Albert's face creased into a smile of amusement. "Told them he 
had paid by the strange man to bring him here, and he didn't 
know more than that. They gave him a warning to keep his 
mouth shut, and let him go." He shrugged. "Who'd believe a 
teenage boy anyway, especially a Navajo."
	'Who'd believe a pair of fugitive FBI agents,' Scully 
thought wearily.  The question was what to do now, but before 
she could even open her mouth to speak, her friend interrupted 
with the air of someone who knows that he is yet again the bearer 
of bad-tidings.
	"There is something you should see."  She gritted her 
teeth and nodded, accepting the newspaper he handed out to her.  
Moving over to stand under the lamp, she spread out the front 
page. "Oh my God," she gasped as she came face to face with her 
own picture, and that of her partner.
	Her eyes fled upwards to the banner headline, 
"MISSING FBI AGENTS SOUGHT IN KILLINGS." Her 
stomach began to flip in her belly, sending waves of nausea 
through her as she began to read. "FBI Agent Fox 
Mulder...wanted for questioning in connection with the shooting 
death of his father, William Mulder...Body of FBI Agent Alex 
Krycek found beaten to death...Mulder and partner, Dana Scully 
missing...Agent Mulder showing signs of emotional 
breakdown...all federal and state agencies alerted...believed to be 
armed and dangerous..."  She thrust the text away from her, 
clenching her fists.
	"It's not true." Her voice was low, but clear.  "Lies, 
always more lies."  She looked up at the man who had so recently 
been a stranger, and now held their lives in his hand. He 
reassured her with a nod.  "No one frightens those with secrets 
more than one who is willing to sacrifice himself for the truth."  
They both turned to gaze at the sleeping man on the bed.
	"I don't know what to do anymore," she admitted, 
barely holding onto control of her voice. "Up until now, I 
thought that there was a way to find justice, to prove the truth by 
the book.  That there was still a place for the Bureau in my life."  
She bent her head back, staring at the ceiling.  "I could go back. 
Tell them it was a mistake, try to tell them the truth.  But they 
wouldn't believe me. I know that now. At best, they wouldn't 
believe, at worst they would kill me.  They will kill him if they get 
the chance. And there's no place left for us to go."  Life was 
tumbling down around her, and she felt empty.  The last of her 
beliefs were crumbling, and she was left without a center, without 
guidance or understanding,
	"I have a place you can go.  You both need time to rest 
and recover. Decisions can be made later, once you are both well 
and safe."  Albert offered firmly, causing Scully to turn to him in 
surprise.
	"Why are you helping us?" she asked, not necessarily 
out of suspicion, but rather out of pure confusion.
	He was silent for a moment, then answered seriously, 
"Because he is a Truth Seeker, and that is rare and to be valued.  
Because, you need the help. Because I know enough of the truth 
to realize how important both of you - and your work is - how 
important THAT is." He pointed to the pile of translated Defense 
Department files on the desk.  Then he grinned, "and perhaps, 
because I never thought I'd meet a par of feds who were decent 
people." He winked at her. "Figures they'd be out to get you." 
With that he turned and headed for the door.
	Just as he was closing the door behind him, he met her 
eyes again.  "Rest, but be ready.  We will move you as soon as it 
is safe."
					- - - - -

	Mulder was burning up with another fever, and she 
spent several long hours by his side, wiping his brow with cold 
cloth, trying to force water-solubilized antibiotics down his 
throat, dozing when she got the chance.  Just as she was falling 
into another fitful slumber, a hand shook her shoulder while 
another closed down on her mouth.
	"Shhh," a voice sounded in her ear.  "The government 
men are coming.  We have to move you now."
	She looked up into the bronzed Navajo face, unfamiliar, 
but welcome, and nodded.  He released her, then offered her a 
hand to help her to her feet. Together, they picked Mulder up and 
hauled him out to the waiting truck, laying him on the flat bed, 
then covering him with a heavy woolen blanket against the desert 
night chills.  The she raced back in and threw all of their stuff 
together, making certain she had picked up every piece of the 
DOD document, and tossing it into her briefcase. Then tossing it 
all into the truck beside Mulder, she climbed in and lay down next 
to him.  A heavy blanket was tossed over her, and she drew it 
around both of them, pressing herself close to her unconscious 
partner as the engine burst into life and the truck jolted to a start.
					- - - - -

	The ride though the night was another long nightmare, 
the sounds of the sirens blaring, as the police cars rolled past 
them on the street, almost giving her a heart-attack.  Once that 
sound had been familiar and comforting, meaning help and safety, 
now it was menacing and frightening.  It meant certain death for 
Mulder, and maybe for her as well.  She knew that she already 
knew too much.  They'd never let her go free.  Though, in fact, 
THEY were probably sitting back and relaxing, happy to let the 
FBI and police do their dirty work for them.  
	Watching the news on the small TV in the motel room 
had become an exercise in frustration and irritation.  As they 
broke Mulder's life apart, all she could think was that there was 
easily enough agony there to make any newshound grin from ear-
to-ear. The brilliant eccentric, gifted and admittedly idiosyncratic, 
obsessed and driven; his extraordinary talent for getting into the 
mind of serial killers only helped make him an easy target for 
their slander.  Throw in the loss of his sister, rumors of child-
abuse, and his preoccupation with the UFO phenomena, and you 
had the perfect picture of a man who's sanity had finally slipped 
over the edge.
	The Bureau was playing it safe, speaking in dulcet tones 
about the stress of the job, the effect of steady delving into the 
minds of psychotics on a 'sensitive intellect.'  Refusing to state 
more than that the missing agents were 'wanted for questioning,'  
the Bureau touted Mulder's accomplishments loudly, while 
psychiatrists battled over their chance to speak to the multitude.  
She had almost broken the TV when one white-haired 'expert' 
began expounded on the connection between genius and insanity.
	All she could hope for now was a chance to get 
somewhere safe and bring Mulder back to health.  She needed 
him; despite his obsessions, he was all she had.  And she trusted 
him more than anyone else... No, she corrected herself.  He was 
the only one she trusted at all.  Out of the influence of the drugs 
they had pumped into him in the recent days, he was smart and 
capable, able to face his own weaknesses and mistakes; mostly 
when she forced him to look, but he DID listen.  Together, they 
were a powerful team: an equal balance of skills, training, styles, 
and abilities.  Together, they might stand a chance of getting out 
of this alive.
					- - - - -

	Just as dawn began to send steaks of red through the 
sky, the truck pulled to a stop.  Pushing bright strands of hair out 
of her eyes, Scully peeked out from under the blanket.  The 
driver was already coming around the truck to help her up and 
out.  Her legs felt unsteady on the rocky ground, but it felt good 
to be standing on her own two feet.
	Looking around her in the soft dawn light, she drew in a 
deep breath.  Wherever they were, it was wild and beautiful in its 
natural splendor. A small trickle of water ran in a small riverbed 
beside the truck, which was parked at the bottom of a long 
canyon. Huge walls of red stone rose on either side, dotted here 
and there with sparse vegetation, mostly the prickly odd-shaped 
cactuses.  A small building made of fitted rocks and dried mud 
was to her right, next to a small corral that held several horses, 
their smell filling the air.
	The door opened and two people stepped out, both 
wearing that odd mixture of modern American and traditional 
native clothing that she was beginning to find characteristic of 
these people. One was a young woman with long black hair 
flowing around her, the other was an ancient man, with a face so 
full of wrinkles and folds, that she could barely make out his 
eyes.  But he moved nimbly on his cane, and his mouth was bent 
upwards in a smile of welcome.
	They broke into conversation with the driver in the 
musical Navajo language, each gesturing vividly.  Scully knew 
they were talking about her and Mulder, and felt frustrated at not 
being able to understand.  Unable to do anything else, she got 
back up onto the back of the truck and sat down beside Mulder, 
automatically reaching out to check his pulse and temperature. 
The former was steady, the latter a little warm - but definitely 
improved, and that knowledge gave her a slight uplift.
	The truck creaked behind her and she turned to see the 
ancient scramble toward her on his knees.  She tensed slightly, 
feeling suddenly protective of Mulder, but she could sense no 
threat from the old man.  He came to a stop beside her, then 
stared down at her sleeping partner.  Lifting a gnarled hand, the 
ancient Navajo reached out and touched the sleeping man's face, 
then closed his eyes and began to chant.  Taken aback, she sat 
there, watching and listening, far beyond her ability to protest or 
argue.
	After several long moments of the sing-song chant, the 
ancient sat back and smiled.  Turning his head to the other two 
standing at the end of the truck, he issued a couple of commands 
in Navajo, then scrambled back to be helped down.  The woman 
then reached out to Scully and finally spoke in clear English.
	"Ms. Scully, would you like to come in and have 
something to eat, you must be starving."  Scully began to shake 
her head, her thoughts still focused on Mulder, but her stomach 
betrayed her with a loud growl.  Placing her hand over the 
offending organ, she found herself slowly mirroring the other 
woman's smile. And suddenly, for the first time in several long 
days and nights, she began to feel like maybe - just maybe - they 
were safe.  For now.
					- - - - -



Somewhere on the Navajo Reservation
New Mexico



	Mulder stirred, turned over onto his side, and took a 
deep breath.  Something was scratching the side of his face, and 
he brushed at it, feeling it gather under his fingers.  His eyes still 
closed tightly, he drew in another breath, letting the smell of 
wool, dirt and smoke drift into his nose.  Sudden memories 
flooded him, and he jerked to a sitting position, squinting in the 
dim light.
	He was in some kind of small cabin, except that it 
appeared to be made of mud and stone rather than wood. The 
floor was packed dirt, with brightly patterned rugs spread out 
over it.  The furniture was simple, a small wooden table and two 
chairs, a large tub, a small counter and shelf along one wall.  The 
bed he was laying on was huge, taking up half the room, sitting 
low to the floor.  He lifted the scratchy wool blankets up, finding 
that he was dressed in an embroidered robe that fell almost to his 
knees, the top open almost to his navel, several ties loose in their 
holes across his chest.
	Placing his bare feet on the floor, he looked again for 
some sign of life, relieved to see that he was at least alive, and 
not too badly hurt.  There was just enough pain behind his eyes, 
and lancing the still-raw areas in his skin, to convince him he was 
not yet dead.  But if he wasn't in the afterlife, then where was he?
	"You're awake," a warm-toned female voice sounded 
from his left.  He lifted his head and peered at the silhouette 
framed by bright sunlight in the doorway.  It was small and 
slender, the head surrounded by a brilliant red halo.  "Scully," he 
said, feeling the muscles of his face complain as he stretched 
them into a wide smile.  A sudden jolt of pain stabbed behind his 
eyes, and he buried his head in his hands with a groan.
	Instantly, she was beside him, reaching out to steady 
him. "Easy," she scolded, pushing him downwards towards the 
bed.  He went willingly, and once he was stretched back out on 
the bed, she pulled the covers back up over him.
	"Where are we?" he whispered, drinking in the sight of 
her, feeling her presence warm his entire body.  More memories 
came back, and he shuddered slightly, how could he have said 
and done the things he had, after all they had been through.  She 
meant so much to him, and even the knowledge that it had been 
the drugs he had unknowingly been fed, he still felt ashamed of 
himself.
	Scully saw a flood of emotions wash across his mobile 
features, and she tried to reassure him.  "We're safe," she said 
gently, pressing her palm into his forehead, relieved to feel the 
coolness of it.  "The Navajo's brought us here, I'm not sure where 
exactly, but it's isolated and secure.  No one will find us here. Do 
you remember what happened?" She eyed him anxiously.
	He swallowed then nodded.  "I think so.  The boy took 
me out to the quarry.  I was speaking to you on the phone when 
suddenly the door slammed shut on me.  I could hear loud noises 
outside, and figured I was in trouble.  I buried myself in the 
skeletons," he shook visibly at the horror of that memory, then 
forced himself to continue.  "Someone poked around a bit, but 
didn't mess with the pile I was under.  Then I heard the order to 
burn the place, and figured I needed to get out fast.  But there 
wasn't time to get out the way I'd come in, but I did find hole in 
the far wall that led into some kind of crevice.  There was an 
explosion behind me, and I pushed myself thought the rocks as 
fast as I could. For a few minutes there I thought I was dead, but 
most of the fire burned up towards the open air, rather than into 
the rocks , so I was able to get away deeper into the crevices. I 
don't know how long I spent crawling around in there, but finally 
I got out. I remember falling, then...waking up here."
	Scully nodded. "The army showed up, took the boy 
away." At Mulder's worried look, she reassured him with a brief 
smile, "He's fine. They released him.  I went to the quarry to find 
you," Her face tightened.  "For a while I thought you were dead, 
then all of a sudden you came tumbling down the quarry wall. 
Scared the hell out of me," she added, softening the words with 
another smile. He smiled in return, then his face settled again.  
"How'd we end up here?"
	"The Navajos helped me get you back to the motel and 
clean you up.  You were in pretty rough shape." She frowned 
again, this part was not going to be easy to tell.  He saw the 
grimness of her expression and frowned, while his eyes urged her 
on.
	"Krycek is dead," she said bluntly. "Someone beat him 
to death in your apartment."
	"What?" he exclaimed, " but..."
	"He was alive and well, when we left Washington. I had 
enough on my hands getting you into the car, so I wasn't paying 
attention to where he went. They must have grabbed him pretty 
quickly."
	"But if they..." Mulder's face took on a look of 
concentration, trying to fight the drug-induced haze that shaded 
those days. "If they killed him, then who...do you think...?"
	"Do I think he killed your father?" She shook her head. 
"I don't know, Mulder, I just don't know."
	He accepted that silently, then waved his hand, 
gesturing for her to continue.
	"Of course, they think you did it, after you killed your 
father.  There is a country-wide manhunt out for you right now, 
well...for us." She told him as gently as she could.
	"Oh God," he leaned back against the pillow, squeezing 
his eyes shut.  Then he opened his eyes, letting his dark hazel 
gaze close on her face.  Reaching out to take her hand, he spoke 
with utter sincerity. "I'm sorry, Dana. I'm sorry I got you into 
this."
	"It's not your fault." She told him, squeezing his hand.  
"I'm a grown woman, and I got myself into this.  I'm the one who 
shot you, remember."  she grinned at him, and he couldn't help 
grinning back.
	"I'm not likely to forget." he replied.  Then he sighed 
and releasing her hand, rubbed at his face wearily.
	"So how did we escape?" he asked.
	"The locals apparently have little liking for the US 
government, and the spectacle of two feds on the run from their 
own people appears to have sparked their sympathy.  That and 
the fact they know full well something is going on.  Several of 
them saw what you did in that railway car, so they are quite 
willing to believe.  Anyway, they trucked us out into the middle 
of nowhere, then loaded us on horseback, you in a litter, and 
brought us out to the *end* of nowhere. That was yesterday.  
We have enough supplies to last us a couple of months if we're 
careful, and a well that should keep us in water.  They will visit 
us with news in a couple of weeks."
	That caused him to sit upright. "A couple of WEEKS! 
Scully, we can't stay here for that long."
	"We may have to stay here longer, Mulder," she 
insisted. "Our faces are all over the news, they're playing this to 
the hilt. You are considered armed and dangerous; they're not 
certain if I'm a hostage or a willing accomplice - but they are 
leaning towards the latter.  We take one step into a public place 
and we're as good as dead. They'll make sure of that."
	He didn't like it at all, but he saw the sense in her words. 
and he was tired.  Like it or not, he did need time to rest and to 
think. Leaning back he let her see his surrender in his face, and 
she responded by helping him settle down.  "Get some rest, 
Mulder. I'll fix us something to eat, okay.  We'll have plenty of 
time to talk."
					- - - - -
	 
	Waking up slowly, Mulder turned and blinked at the 
stream of light coming through the open door and windows.  
Sliding his legs onto the floor he tested his bare feet on the rug, 
then pushed himself upwards.  His shoulder protested the 
movement, but his legs held.  Rubbing his eyes, he looked around 
for his clothes, but nothing was there in the tidy little room.  
Feeling the heat of the desert sun on him as he walked to the 
doorway, he decided that the cool linen robe wasn't all that bad, 
even if he felt like it was a native form of a hospital gown.
	Stepping out into the open air, he squinted, shielding his 
eyes with his hand.  The cabin was in a small canyon, a barely 
trickling stream nearby, lined with a few trees and hardy grasses.  
There was a fence nearby, within which he could see a couple of 
horses grazes along the water's edge, and to his left was a small 
well with a hand-pump and bucket.  
	"How are you feeling?" Scully's voice sounded behind 
him, and he turned towards her.  She was dressed in a pair of cut-
off jeans, sneakers, and a loose white, brightly embroidered top.  
Her shining copper hair was bound up a pony-tail, a few strands 
curling around her chin.  She looked fresh and relaxed, and he 
suddenly felt rather conspicuous in the nightshirt.
	Pulling slightly at the hem, he reminded himself that she 
was a doctor, that she was in effect HIS doctor, and had been 
since they had become partners. He usually avoided doctors at all 
costs, so she had taken over that role, just as she had taken over 
so much of his life. Not that he wasn't happy and grateful to have 
her, on the contrary, he didn't know what he would do without. 
'You'd be dead,' a small inner voice reminded him, as he cleared 
his throat and quietly assured her that he felt okay.
	"Uhn, Scully, do you happen to know where..." He 
asked, still fumbling with the robe.  She grinned with amusement 
at his embarrassment, but soon took pity on him.  "I didn't have a 
chance to bring much with us, but the Navajo's loaned us some 
things.  They're in a box under the bed.
	Soon she was handing him a pair of jeans and a loose 
blue shirt, rather similar to the one she was wearing.  Figuring 
there really wasn't much of him she probably hadn't seen already, 
he simply abandoned the robe and pulled the new clothes on as 
quickly as he could.  The waist of the jeans was a little loose, but 
otherwise, it wasn't too bad, and a thin leather belt with a silver 
buckle solved that problem.
	"Hmmm," she said, watching him adjust the shirt 
sleeves.  "You won't win any fashion prizes, but it'll do."
	"Hey, I'm the model of a modern cowboy. All I need are 
the boots."  He placed his hands on his hips and posed at her.
	She laughed, gave him a poke in the belly, and went 
over to sit on the edge of the bed. "I'm afraid you'll have to use 
your sneakers or go barefoot for now. When Albert and the 
others come to visit, maybe you can ask them for the boots."
	He sat down beside her, his expression settling into a 
slight frown.  "Have you heard anything at all while I was 
sleeping?"
	"No," she replied. "And the less contact we have with 
the world right now the better.  Give them, and us a chance to 
cool off."
	They sat in a companionable, but still thoughtful silence 
for a few minutes. "We have some decisions to make, Scully." 
Mulder finally broke in.
	"I know," she concurred.  "I read the translated files 
over and over.  Some of it I understand, other parts don't make 
sense. Codes within codes, I guess."
	Mulder nodded. "I need to read them too."  
	Scully got up and walked over the table.  "They're all 
here," she said.  "You've got plenty of time."
	"Yeah," he rubbed the back of his neck.  "and nothing 
better to do." His eyes darkened, as he leapt up to prowl the 
room.  "Damn it Scully, I hate sitting here, unable to DO 
anything."
	"I know," she replied.  "But this time we need to think 
before we act."
	He paused and faced her, the slight edge in her voice not 
escaping him.  "I'm sorry, Scully. I know this mess is all my fault.  
You know, you CAN go back.  Tell them I kidnapped you or 
something.  There's no reason you have to sacrifice your 
career..."
	"NO!" She interrupted him fiercely.  She stepped up 
closer to him, her blue eyes blazing.  "I'm in this because I want 
to be, because I HAVE to be.  I need to know the truth, too."  
She angled her head to stare down at the pile of documents.  "I 
have to know what they did to me." Her voice turned deadly 
serious.  "Mulder, I've had a lot of time to think over the last few 
days. During the drive out here, tending you in the motel and 
here, reading those files.  And I started to ask myself, when does 
refusing to believe stop becoming sensible and scientific, and start 
becoming outright denial."
	"Scully," he said, but she silenced him with a wave of 
her hand.  
	"How much do I have to see, how much do they have to 
do to us, before I can admit that you might be right? That there 
IS something out there, and the government knows about it?  I 
can't keep telling myself that it can't be real, that science says that

aliens aren't possible.  They did things to me I can't remember 
except in nightmares, I saw that hit man change shape from you 
to someone else, saw the woman's body melt into green mush..." 
	She ran out of words, a single tear slipping down her 
cheek.  "They killed your father, tried to kill you, almost killed 
me,  they've framed you for two murders - all to stop you from 
exposing the truth.  If they are willing to do all that, then you 
must HAVE the truth.  I can't deny that anymore, I can't..." Her 
voice finally broke into a sob, and his frozen stance shattered in 
response.  
	In an instant, he was next to her, gathering her up into 
his arms.  He held her close, and let her cry against his shoulder, 
gently stroking her hair.  He knew how much that admission had 
taken from her, knew how much weight had been put on her 
shoulders over the last week, and felt terribly ashamed that he 
had been more of a burden than a help.
	"Dana, Dana," he whispered against the top of her head. 
"We'll figure a way out of this, I promise.  I'll make sure you're 
safe."  And even though he knew that was easier said and done, it 
was a promise that he meant to keep.
					- - - - -

	The days and nights settled into a routine as Mulder's 
strength returned.  He would start the day by hauling in buckets 
of water to fill the tub and cook breakfast.  They would take 
turns in the tub, while the other boiled corn, or made pancakes 
from their dwindling supply of flour.  After feeding and watering 
the horses, Mulder would go peruse the documents while Scully 
worked on writing up their experiences, trying to get enough 
evidence together to convince someone they were telling the 
truth.
	A midday nap was the best way to deal with the noon 
heat, and the early evenings hours were spent in quiet 
conversation.  In the relaxed atmosphere, they found themselves 
sharing the details of their lives in a way they'd never quite had 
the time for until now.  There was surprisingly little discomfort at 
the thought of sharing the bed, and they found great comfort in 
sleeping in each other's arms.  In fact, Scully could almost 
convince herself that they were just on a vacation, and that the 
dangers facing them in the outside world were simply an 
imagined nightmare. Almost, but not quite.
	One day, towards the end of the first week, Scully 
awoke from the midday nap to find Mulder busily piling bread, 
meat, and bottles of water into saddlebags.  Rubbing the sleep 
from her eyes, she questioned, "What's going on?"
	He turned at the sound of her voice and gave her his 
most engaging smile.  "We may be stuck here, but there's no 
reason we can't do a little exploring.  We've got the horses, and 
I've been itching to take a ride. I haven't had the chance to do 
much riding since college, and I miss it.  So how do you feel 
about a picnic?"
	"A picnic sounds wonderful," she admitted.  "But we'd 
better not go to far.  If we get lost out there, we could really be 
in trouble."
	"So we leave trail markers or stay within the canyon.  
Come on, Scully. It'll be fun to take a good gallop," he urged.
	She smiled at his enthusiasm.  "YOU can take a gallop, 
I'll be happy with a slow trot.  My horseback riding experience is 
limited to pony-rides at the zoo."
	"I'll teach you," he offered, closing the packs and 
shouldering them.
	"Uh huh," she murmured, giving his back a suspicious 
look as he loped out the door, leaving her some privacy to get 
dressed.  She wasn't in the least bit certain she trusted his riding 
ability.
	As it turned out, however, he was an excellent rider, and 
the lack of saddles didn't hamper him at all.  She watched with 
some amazement, as he led them out along the stream bed, sitting 
on his horse as easily as if he had been born on a horse. Seeing 
the surprise written on her face, he grinned. "Guess it's like riding 
a bike, you never forget how."
	"How did you learn to ride," she asked, holding on tight 
to the horse's mane and the reins of the rope bridle, relieved that 
her horse seemed content to follow his without complaint.
	"Polo," he answered, guiding his horse with one hand, 
the other resting on his knee.
	"What?" she asked, squinting into the sun.
	"At Oxford I was on the polo team. Eight years of it, 
graduate and undergraduate. We actually won occasionally, and I 
made the all England-collegiate team my senior year."  He 
laughed, an open unguarded sound she hadn't heard from him in 
far too long.  "I loved it.  It was even better than track, moved so 
much faster.  It requires a lot more skill than you would think.  
Most people think its a joke, a rich-kids game - but it can get 
really hairy out there.  A lot of horses moving fast, riders 
swinging sticks, and the ball rolling under the hooves.  I was 
lucky, never got seriously hurt, but I had a friend nearly lose a leg 
when a horse came down on top of him."  He frowned at the 
memory.
	"I'm sorry," she said softly.  He took his eyes off the 
empty air, and refocused them back on her face. 
	"That's okay.  He recovered, though he had to give up 
playing.  And things like that didn't happen too often.  Most of 
the players were excellent riders, and I learned a lot. Even some 
pretty neat tricks."  He grinned again.
	She smiled back, and they rode along in silence for a 
while, breathing in the fresh air, admiring the scenery, watching 
for the lizards sunning themselves among the rocks.  After an 
hour or so, Mulder pulled his horse to a halt, waiting for Scully 
to unevenly pull alongside.  He gestured at a small grassy area 
next to the stream they had been tracing as a landmark.  A couple 
trees provided some slight shelter, and the stream widened into 
what could almost be considered a small pool.  On the other side 
of the stream-bed, the cliff rose straight up, blocking out some of 
the direct sunlight.
	"How does that look?"
	"It looks wonderful," she said, delighted for any excuse 
to get off the horse. She had just gotten over the soreness from 
the first ride out here, and the muscles were already beginning to 
complain.  Her only satisfaction came from his soft groan as he 
slid off his horse and rubbed the back of his thighs.  Catching her 
watching him, he shrugged.  "I'm a little out of shape."
	"Me, too," she answered, deciding this was too nice a 
day to spoil  by teasing him, as much fun as that could be.
	Tethering the horses to one of the trees, leaving them 
enough rope to reach the water, they settled down on the grass. 
Mulder handed her one of the canteens, then pulled the cork from 
other and took a gulp, then sprawled down on the grass, closing 
his eyes. Smiling warmly, Scully followed suit, drinking the tepid 
water with more enjoyment than she would have thought, then 
wriggling around to rest the back of her head against his chest.  
He didn't move, except to bring an arm down to wrap around her 
waist.
	Dozing in the shelter of the trees, the only sounds those 
of the wind, the water, and the occasional snort from the horses, 
Scully felt utterly at peace. Now, finally, she could shut it all out, 
no documents, no bullets, no threats, nothing but her and Mulder 
and the quiet, sweet-smelling earth beneath them.  It would be 
easy to want to stay here, to not go back.  A half-conscious 
daydream overtook her, and her mind flowed with the images.  
Brushing over the source of income, perhaps she could act as a 
doctor for the Indians - yes, she liked that idea. But they make a 
home here, grow old here, raise a family here...
	What was she thinking!? Scully stirred, lifting her head 
up from the warmth of his chest and sat up, brushing strands of 
auburn hair out of her sleepy eyes. Twisting around to look at her 
partner's face as he remained recumbent on the grass, she traced 
every familiar line of his face with her eyes. His own eyes were 
closed, the thick, black eyelashes resting on his already suntanned 
cheeks, the dark shadows that had been so prominent beginning 
to fade. The slight breeze picked up and dropped the dark 
tendrils of hair on his forehead, his brow was clear and straight, 
the lines smoothed out. His mouth, sometimes generous and even 
pouting, other times drawn tight and grim, was relaxed, slightly 
parted to give a glimpse of white teeth.
	Almost of their own accord, her fingers reached out to 
softly trace the high arch of his cheekbone, thinking with some 
amusement that there were women who would trade their souls 
for his bone structure.  But Mulder didn't care, showed nothing 
more than some slight embarrassment at any comment regarding 
his looks. She knew he regarded himself as ordinary, maybe plain, 
when he even bothered to think about it. And his tendency to 
prefer well-cut and expensive suits was more an appreciation of 
quality and comfort than a consideration towards his appearance. 
In fact, the only way he seemed to express himself in his looks 
were those god-awful ties, and it amazed her just how much he 
enjoyed them, and the reaction to them.  
	Mulder liked to play with people's heads sometimes, 
though mostly out of boredom.  The frustration of a man whose 
mind was usually several jumps ahead of everyone around him, 
and got irritated when they refused to even try to catch up.  What 
would it be like to see things that no-one else did, to sense the 
world through his penetrating, yet often child-like, eyes, she 
wondered as she continued to stroke the side of his face 
absentmindedly.
	"Ahhh," she gasped, as his hand suddenly seized hers, 
and his eyes blinked open to catch her studying him. She felt a 
slight blush creep up her cheeks, and mentally cursed her give-
away coloring.  His eyes were dark and piercing, the hazel far 
more brown than green in the shade, but his mouth was already 
curving up into a smile.
	"Find what you were looking for?" he asked her lazily, 
not bothering to move from his supine position.
	"Maybe," she replied rather tersely, arching a copper 
eyebrow at him, though she returned his smile and left her hand 
resting between his hand and his cheek.
	His smile broke into a wide grin and he moved her palm 
down to his mouth so that he could press a quick kiss into it.  
Then he let her go, and moved his hands back to support his 
head.  She sat leaning over him quietly, waiting for him to say the 
words that were obviously lingering on the edge of his mouth. It 
took him a few moments, and the words were nearly a whisper.
	"Out here, I feel a little like Adam, the first man, alone 
in the world. Just us and the water and the earth and the animals. 
It's so peaceful, I could almost believe that there is nothing else, 
no FBI, no government, no men trying to kill us, no..." He didn't 
say the word 'aliens,' but it hovered between them in the air, 
unspoken but understood.
	Until she broke the contact between their eyes just long 
enough to reach into one of the saddlebags and pull out a small, 
red apple.  Turning back to him, her red lips curved upwards in a 
smile that created large dimples along the edges of her mouth, 
she held it out on the palm of her hand just above his chest.
	He looked at it, up at her, and then started to laugh, the 
sound one of pure and simple joy.  It was infectious, and she 
joined in, her mirth harmonizing with the deeper sound of his. 
Then he lifted the small fruit from her hand and waving it in a 
salute, he took a bite, his eyes never leaving hers.
	Still smiling, she wiped a small trickle of juice from the 
corner of his mouth while he chewed and swallowed.  "Actually, 
it's pretty good," he mumbled through the mouthful. "Want 
some?"
	"Sure," she said, and not bothering to take the apple 
from him, she just leaned down and seized it with her teeth.
	"Hey, watch my fingers," he protested lightly. She 
chewed and swallowed, then gave him a teasing look. "I'm not 
that hungry...yet."
	He chuckled, then sat up facing her.  He placed the 
partially eaten apple on top of the open saddlebag, then took hold 
of her shoulders and pulled her closer to him.  She settled against 
him without protest, though her face remained calm, and 
somewhat amused, and her lips parted as she drew in a deep 
breath. He stared down into her wide, clear blue eyes for a 
moment, then drew one hand through her hair, watching intently 
as the shining red strands twined over his fingers.
	"Dana?" The one word was a question and a demand, a 
warning and a promise all at once. She hesitated for the briefest 
of seconds, knowing they were about to take another big leap, 
again throwing all caution to the winds.  But even though they 
WOULD have to face the outside world again, and all its 
strictures and rules, problems, and dangers, she wanted - oh how 
much she wanted - to forget it all, even just for one sunlit 
afternoon in the middle of the New Mexico desert.
	He saw a variety of emotions flash across her face, 
holding his breath deep in his lungs.  He knew all the questions 
and all the answers.  All the reasons to stop, to keep their 
partnership the carefully platonic friendship it had been for the 
past two years. But it was getting harder and harder to deny his 
own feelings. He'd known for months just how much in love with 
this woman he was, how much he needed her strength and 
courage, her rock solid faith in this world and its reality, her logic 
and scientific acumen, her smile and her unwavering support. But 
right now he needed, wanted MORE, so desperately that the ache 
was a physical presence in both his groin and his chest, emotional 
and physical love deeply intertwined.
	Then she smiled, slowly, slowly, and his abdomen 
tightened, his breath released in a rush, as she wrapped her arms 
around his shoulders and guided his mouth down to hers.
				*****
	Her breath was warm on the bare skin of his chest.  
Leaning down to kiss the top of her head, Mulder tasted her hair, 
then nuzzled her forehead.  With a murmur of pleasure, Scully 
moved across him just enough to offer him her mouth, her breasts 
pressed into his side, her naked hips draped across his. He kissed 
her gently, but thoroughly, then pulled up to a sitting position, 
keeping her cradled in his embrace. 
	She sighed and snuggled into his lap, feeling the throb of 
a growing erection against her bottom. With satisfaction she 
licked at the skin of his jaw, then took a nibble at his throat. He 
laughed deep in his throat, then took her chin in the palm of his 
hand and lifted her face to his.  She let her eyelids fall almost 
shut, and parted her mouth for his kiss.  He brushed her lips 
gently, then hugged her close, ignoring her moan of protest as he 
stared up at the sky.
	"Dana, love, I think we'd better start back. I don't want 
to get caught out here after dark." His voice was regretful, but 
resolute. Enjoying a sunny afternoon out here was one thing, 
wandering in the dark was another.
	Scully sighed against his shoulder, then rubbed her nod 
of agreement against his chest.  Reluctant as she was to give up 
the magic of this day, she too was terrified of the idea of getting 
lost out in this wilderness.  The small cabin with its rough bed 
was beginning to seem very appealing to them both, and they 
hurried into their clothes.
	Mulder helped her up into her horse, then mounted his 
in fluid motion. Side-by-side, they turned the horses back they 
way they had come, leaving behind no more than an indentation 
in the grass where their bodies had lain.
					- - - - -
===========================================================================



Still somewhere on the Navaho Reservation
New Mexico



	Taking full advantage of the chance to renew his riding 
skills, Mulder got into the habit of riding a couple hours a day. 
Scully was less interested, but as she got more confident, she 
spent more time with him on his rides.  They explored the length 
of the canyon, always returning to their cabin well before 
nightfall.  The nights were spent talking and making love, 
opening up to each other totally. Thus the week passed quickly, 
the days blending into each other, making Albert Hosteen's 
arrival something of a surprise.
	At the sound of a horse's hooves outside, Mulder rushed 
outside, motioning to Scully to stay behind him, but she refused 
to be anywhere but by his side.  Both relaxed visibly at the sight 
of their visitor, as he dismounted his horse with surprising ease 
for a man his age. Glancing at their faces, he grinned.  "I was 
nearly born in the saddle, and always loved riding more than 
anything."
	Mulder smiled.  "I know what you mean.  It gives you a 
real sense of freedom."  He took the reins from Albert and led the 
horse into the corral, then released it next to the water trough.  It 
neighed at the other two horses, then buried its long nose in the 
welcoming water.
	"Please, come in and sit down," Scully offered, holding 
the door open. Once all three were inside, she poured water into 
three earthenware mugs and handed the men one each.  Albert 
saluted them both, then drank deeply. "Unfortunately," he said, 
shaking his head.  "what the mind still enjoys, doesn't always 
please the body."  He sank down into the chair Mulder was 
proffering and rubbed at his back.
	Mulder and Scully grinned at each other, then sat 
together on the edge of the bed facing their guest, Mulder's long 
legs pulled up against his chest, so that he was almost leaning his 
chin on his knees.
	Albert took another swallow, then met their anxious 
eyes.  "You two have certainly stirred up a buzzard's nest.  We've 
been flooded with feds, all wandering in their heavy black suits 
and sweating under their sunglasses."  He took in the appearance 
of the couple facing him, the lovely, flame-haired woman dressed 
in an embroidered white linen man's shirt that easily covered her 
knees, and the slender, already sun-bronzed man in jeans and 
sleeveless T-shirt.  Not what you expected another pair of FBI 
agents to look like, but then from the beginning he'd known there 
was nothing ordinary about these two.
	Mulder grinned slightly at the images of his 'colleagues' 
sweating in the hot sun, then his mouth settled into a frown.  
"What are they saying?"
	"Mostly, they are just asking questions about you.  
Where are you, where did you go, what did you do while you 
were here..." Albert leaned back in his chair and smirked.  "And 
of course, getting a completely different answer from everyone 
they ask." He chuckled, his eyes gleaming.  "My people are 
having the time of their lives watching the feds chase their own 
tails."
	Mulder and Scully shared a smile, but couldn't maintain 
the amusement.  "They still think I did it, that I..." Mulder just 
couldn't say 'killed my father.' It still hurt deeply.  He and his 
father had not had a good relationship, to put it mildly.  There 
was so much pain between them, but at the end his father had 
tried - to reach out, to ask forgiveness - and that was something 
Mulder couldn't forget.  He owed his father something for that, 
though he wasn't sure what.
	Scully knew the thoughts running through his mind, 
without needing to hear him say a word. She placed her hand on 
his arm and squeezed gently.  Albert simply sighed. "They are not 
saying much, just that they want to 'TALK' to you.  Other than 
that, they do not say much.  But the one you mentioned, Dr. 
Scully, the one called 'Skinner' - he is here."
	"Here, in New Mexico!" Mulder exclaimed.
	Albert nodded.  "Seems quite determined to find you. I 
think some of the others are ready to give up, or have decided 
you left here, but he seems certain that you are here, and he 
keeps pushing."
	"He's probably just dreaming about the idea of chewing 
me out personally." Mulder commented dryly. 
	Albert grinned. "That one reminds me of a marine 
sergeant I knew in the war. No one could deliver a kick in the 
butt better."
	"That's Skinner." Mulder replied.  "Though, I wonder." 
He rubbed at his chin.  "If 'anyone' will listen it will be Skinner, 
though he's probably pretty mad at me right now."
	"He has good reason, Mulder." Scully told him, arching 
an eyebrow at him. He resisted the temptation to touch, then 
taste, that small, copper arch, and instead grimaced. "I know. But 
he might listen to you and if we can get some of the evidence to 
him, the dialysis filter from the water tank in my building, and the 
bullet you pulled from the wall of my apartment..." He shrugged.  
"I'm still not sure if I trust him, or if I know whose side he's really

on, but I think he's our best shot."
	Scully had to agree, but she also wanted to hedge their 
bets.  "Before we do that, Albert, I'd like to ask you one more 
favor."  She stood up and walked over to the table.  Fingering the 
heavy pile of documents, now frayed along the edge by constant 
use.  "I'd like to get copies of these placed in safe places.  One to 
my father's lawyer, maybe one to one of your contacts, 
Mulder...the Lone Gunmen or NICAP.  If we send them in a 
sealed envelope, with instructions not to open unless something 
happens to us... I know it sounds cliched, but it would make me 
feel better.  This is the only insurance we have right now."
	"Clichés become clichés because they're usually good 
sense." Mulder said. "Don't take any risks, Albert, but if your 
people can do this for us, we'll be even more in your debt."
	"Consider it done," Albert replied.  "We can take them 
with us tomorrow."
	"Tomorrow?" Scully questioned. "Where are we 
going?"
	"An important ceremony is being held in three days not 
far from here." Albert explained.  "We need to cleanse the land, 
purge the spirits of the dead, ease the suffering of the souls of 
those who lay buried for so long hidden in the earth.  And we 
would be honored if you - both - would join us."
	Scully saw the instantaneous light of interest in Mulder's 
hazel eyes, he was fascinated, and didn't bother to hide his 
excitement. "We'd love to," he blurted out, then glanced up at 
Scully's amused face.  She smiled tenderly at him, then tucking 
strands of hair behind her ear, she turned to Albert.  "After all 
you've done for us, how could we refuse. We'd be honored."
					- - - - -




	"Thank you," Scully closed the door to the room the 
Navajo had given to her and Mulder during their stay at the 
ceremonial gathering place. It was a sign of respect and 
understanding that she was deeply grateful for, especially since 
the nights were the only time she and Mulder had together here.  
In traditional style, the men were segregated from the women, 
each performing their own rites and dances, praying and singing, 
in separate, adjacent buildings.  
	Though the very modern Dana Scully had balked at the 
tradition at first, she had come to appreciate her time with the 
women. Most of her life had been spent in male-dominated fields, 
medical school, pathology residency, the FBI, so the chance to 
spend a couple days almost solely in the company of these 
women, with their earthy practicality, strength, and often 
surprising humor, was a pleasure. They had welcomed her with 
open friendship, and once she got over her initial embarrassment, 
she joined in wholeheartedly.  In fact, she quickly got the 
impression that while they might take their religion seriously, this 
retreat was often more of a girl's gossip session than anything 
else, ranging from tribal politics, to families, and - of course - 
men. The detailed nature of some of those conversations brought 
up a blush under her already sun-reddened cheeks. 
	Scully smiled softly to herself as stretched out on the 
bed, wriggling her bare toes of the end of the bed. Going 
barefoot had been far harder to adjust to than the ceremonies.  
She didn't know the language, but the beauty of the music didn't 
suffer for that lack, nor did their determination to quiz her about 
every aspect of her relationship with the man they all called "The 
Truth Seeker."  
	She supposed she shouldn't be surprised by her partner's 
ability to win these people's friendship. He could be incredibly 
charming when he decided to put out the effort, though she had 
to admit it was his child-like fascination with their beliefs that 
finally won their respect. Mulder was truly willing to open his 
heart and mind to their culture, ecstatic to learn anything they 
could teach him, and the simple honesty of his acceptance was 
the final bridge to those who had been doubtful of bringing white 
strangers, especially two FBI agents, onto sacred ground. Of 
course, the fact that Mulder was probably close to fluent in their 
language by now, since his eidetic memory absorbed languages 
the way a sponge absorbed water, was icing on the cake. Or 
another 'omen.,' she thought with a chuckle.
	"What's so funny?" Mulder closed the door behind him 
and came to sit on the edge of the bed beside her.  He looked 
completely at ease in the native dress, and with the suntan, he 
could - almost - pass for one of the Navajo. That was until you 
looked into his green-tinged hazel eyes, which were presently 
dancing with barely contained excitement.
	"Just thinking what my Mom would say if she could see 
me now," Scully replied semi-truthfully, rolling onto her side, and 
supporting her head with her hand.  Her bright auburn hair was 
bound into two short braids behind her ears, which combined 
with her sunburnt, freckled complexion to make her resemble a 
Raggedy-Ann doll in Indian dress: a style that Mulder found 
irresistible. And eminently teasable.
	Mulder's grin widened. "Or Skinner," he countered 
dryly.  They both laughed.
	Then, more seriously, "Albert says that the documents 
are copied and mailed with our cover letters.  The originals are 
buried behind the men's sweat lodge."
	"Good," Scully said with relief.  The cassette was hidden 
in the bottom of her eyeglasses case in her purse, a place that 
hardly gave her any feeling of security. But they had traveled very 
light by necessity, and Mulder had arrived here with no more than 
the clothes on his back. 
	"Any progress with the letter to Skinner?" Mulder 
asked.
	"Yes." She wriggled to a sitting position beside him.  
"It's mostly done." Her blue eyes widened. "I just hope the 
dialysis filter and the bullet from your wall are enough to get his 
attention." She shook her head. "I doubt there will be any traces 
left at your building by now."
	"Mmmm, depends upon how thorough they are, and 
how arrogant." Mulder commented without much hope.  "Still, 
there ought to be enough of a trail of behavior in the other 
residents in my building. I know there was one shooting, and I 
doubt that she and I were the only ones affected."
	"I know," Scully replied, her mouth tightening. "I wish I 
had had time to alert health authorities.  I removed the one filter, 
I don't know if there were others."
	Mulder winced slightly, he still felt badly about his 
behavior, even if it had been drug induced. "You did the best you 
could Scully. You had a wounded man, already strung out on 
god-knows-what on your hands, and people trying to kill us both.  
It isn't your fault." 
	She nodded, then threw him a knowing glance. "And it 
isn't yours either, Mulder," she said acutely.
	He almost argued that he'd never thought such a thing, 
then gave up and shrugged his shoulders. She knew him far too 
well. So he changed the subject instead.
	"The final ceremony is tomorrow morning.  Albert 
thinks they can smuggle us back into Farmington and hide us 
long enough to get your letter and the evidence to Skinner.  He 
will try to arrange a safe meeting for us with him." He sighed, 
brushing the dark bangs off his forehead.  "As much as I've 
enjoyed our 'vacation' here, we need to get back. There's so much 
to do..."  And not just finding who had spiked the water or killed 
Krycek, or even who killed his father.  There was still the 
aftermath of his father's death to deal with, he felt more than a 
little guilty about not having the chance to at least call his 
mother, much less arrange a funeral. The shock of this, her ex-
husband dead, her son accused of the crime, he was afraid that it 
might be more than she could tolerate. 
	Scully saw his face harden, and the color shift in his eyes 
from the sparkling hazel to ebony, and she instinctively reached 
out to reassure him. Clasping his hand, she angled her face 
towards his. "We'll convince Skinner. He will believe the truth 
once he'd heard it, I know he will." Even as he silently accepted 
her attempt to comfort him, leaning down to kiss her tenderly, he 
knew full well that there was no guarantee Skinner would believe 
a word of it. And he also knew that Scully was just as aware of 
the risks as he was.
					- - - - -

	FBI Assistant Director Skinner wiped the sweat off his 
nose and forehead with an already stained shirt-sleeve.  Even in 
the supposedly air-conditioned police station in Farmington, the 
desert heat seemed to permeate everything.  He wondered for the 
thousandth time why he had bothered to come out here to handle 
this case personally, though he was fully aware of the reasons 
why.  Fox Mulder was a lot of things, impossible, difficult, and 
rebellious came instantly to mind, as did brilliant and gifted.  But 
it was a recognition of the agent's bone-deep integrity and 
honesty that was driving his supervisor to lead the search.  
Mulder might throw the FBI's rules and regulations to the wind, 
but he operated under a set of principles that were, in an utterly 
idiosyncratic manner, even more set and defining. And that was 
what worried Skinner. Mulder's attack on him was foolish, but 
not necessarily out of character. Murder was.
	Bottom line, Skinner didn't believe that Mulder had shot 
his own father. Krycek, maybe, if he felt his own life was in 
danger, or to revenge his father's death.  But Scully wouldn't 
have tolerated that, and the fact that she had willingly gone with 
him created even more doubt in the A.D.'s mind. Scully might lie 
to protect Mulder, if she thought he was threatened, and she 
might put her own life on the line for him, but she would never 
play accomplice to deliberate murder.  Add to that the fact that 
the trail that had led the FBI to Farmington indicated that Mulder 
was seriously ill, and Skinner was feeling an intense inner 
conflict. 
	"Damn you Mulder," he thought, reaching for the 
already lukewarm glass of milk on the desk. His ulcer was acting 
up, his jaw remembered Mulder's punch and all he really wanted 
was a chance to kick his most talented, most frustrating agent 
from here to Alaska. At least it was COLD in Alaska.
	"Sir," came a tentative voice from the doorway.
	"What is it, Jordan?" Skinner barked.
	"I think we may have a lead on Agents Mulder and 
Scully's whereabouts." The young FBI agent spoke 
apologetically, the A.D. had been on a rampage the last couple of 
weeks, and no one wanted to be in the line of fire when he let 
loose.
	"What? Don't stand there like an idiot, Jordan, what 
have you got" Skinner put down the glass and sat upright in his 
chair. It was long past time they got some useful information. 
Even though several of his staff were convinced Mulder and 
Scully had fled New Mexico, Skinner could FEEL they were still 
here.  The Navajo had blocked the investigation at every turn, 
and they were far too amused by watching the FBI bumble 
around.  No, the Indians were hiding the renegade pair, and 
having a great deal of fun doing so.
	Jordan hurried into the appropriated office and sat down 
nervously. Skinner sat back, drumming his fingers against the 
desk, letting his attitude demand a response.
	"The local police picked up an old Navajo. Drunk and 
disorderly. He was mumbling about a big ceremony. Something 
about cleansing the land and pacifying the spirits of the dead. No 
one would have paid any attention, except apparently this guy 
used to be one of their shamans before he started hitting the 
bottle.  He's an outcast now, but still has contacts on the 
reservation. One of the cops thought we might be interested, so 
he called and we sent Bowser and Harris down just in case."  The 
spread of Jordan's hands spoke without words of the level of 
frustration the agents here were feeling in the face of the Navajo's 
blank resistance.
	"They...unh..." Skinner knew immediately that the men 
had plied the drunk with alcohol, and he waved it off. Jordan 
nearly sighed with relief and continued.  "Anyway, the old guy 
said that there had been much debate over letting two whites into 
an important ceremony taking place on sacred ground, though 
the decision was finally made in their favor. He doesn't know for 
sure that the two strangers are Mulder and Scully, but there was 
talk of a man they call "The Truth Seeker" and a flame-haired 
woman."
	Skinner felt the first jolt of satisfaction he'd felt in far 
too long. He had no doubt of that description, no one knowing 
those two agents would. "Where and when is the ceremony 
taking place?" he asked urgently.
	Delighted at the chance to get on his demanding boss' 
good side, Jordan grinned. "Tomorrow morning, somewhere out 
in the desert. It is sacred tribal ground, forbidden to outsiders, 
but our informant knows the territory well. Bowser and Harris 
are working on convincing him to guide us there right now."
	"I don't care if it costs us all the vodka in Russia, get 
that location!" Skinner ordered, reaching for the telephone.
	Realizing he'd been dismissed, and delighted to get out 
without being flayed, Jordan got quickly to his feet and escaped 
the room. Skinner hardly noticed his subordinate's exit, he was 
already shouting instructions into the phone as the door closed.
					- - - - -

	The day of the final ceremony dawned bright and clear. 
Mulder and Scully were awakened just as dawn sent the first rays 
of light over the cliffs. Taking no more time than was necessary 
to snatch a quick kiss, they separated. Mulder joined the men in 
the sweat lodge, while Scully joined the women in their bath 
house.  Sinking down into the heated water, she sighed with 
pleasure, inwardly laughing at Mulder, who had made his opinion 
of the sauna the men preferred quite clear, if only to her. He 
hated it.
	The next couple of hours were spent in cleansing rituals, 
mostly a thorough scrubbing combined with sing-song chants. 
Then the ritual costumes were donned, one of Scully's new found 
friends loaning her a dress that fell nearly to her ankle. It was 
heavy with beads and metalwork in the front, drawn tight around 
her waist with a brightly-dyed leather belt. Her feet remained 
bare, though painted with swirls of color, red and blue and 
orange. The same colors were streaked across her face and 
hands, causing her to feel rather like a little girl playing in her 
mother's make-up. 
	She was hesitant to step outside of the women's 
building, knowing that this time the men and women would meet 
and dance together. But curiosity, and her desire to see what 
Mulder would look like in his war-paint won, and she let the 
women pull her out into the bright sunlight.
	They formed a circle around a huge circle of multi-hued 
sand drawings, and joined hands. The men were not ready to join 
them yet, except for a pair of ancients who stood amid the sacred 
drawings with eyes closed, singing to the sky. The women circled 
round and round, first one way, then the other, until he world 
swung around Scully at dizzying speed and she could concentrate 
on no more than staying on her feet and continuing to move. 
	Focused completely on the dance, no one noticed the 
intruders until the roar of truck engines and the spit of rocks 
under wheels came close.  The dancers didn't open their eyes, or 
hear the invasion, until the men flooding out to join the ceremony 
began to yell.  Their shouts of outrage in guttural Navajo were 
mixed with the sound of screeching tires and shouts of "FBI - 
Freeze!"
	Of course, no one froze, and pandemonium broke loose. 
Nearly a dozen federal agents, led by skinner himself came 
charging up, guns in hand, only to be met by about two dozen 
screaming Indians in full ritual regalia. One startled agent went 
down under a pair of women, one biting deeply into his gun hand, 
causing his weapon to clatter to the ground as he fell. Elsewhere, 
a pair of agents seized one of the Navajo elders, trying to 
handcuff him while he cursed them in a fluent mixture of Navajo 
and English for violating sacred ground.
	Skinner fired a shot into the air in the hope of gaining 
some control, but it was a useless effort. But then his eyes were 
caught by a flash of brilliant red, and he shouted Scully's name 
even as his eyes widened in shock. She looked utterly savage, 
dressed in the native clothes with bright streaks of paint across 
the bare skin of her face, hands and feet.  In response to his call, 
she turned, gave him a furious glare, then spun to strike out at 
the pair of agents closing in on her from the sides. She gave one a 
good hit to the stomach, but the other grabbed her around the 
waist and lifted her off the ground. Enraged, she kicked wildly, 
clawing at his hands and angling her head to spit in his face.
	Skinner shoved his way through the melee to get closer 
to her, but just as the second agent reached out to help restrain 
her (getting a swift kick in the groin from her as a result), a series 
of high-pitched screeches and the pounding of horse's hooves on 
the rocky ground caught the A.D's attention.
	Three Indian men came riding around the corner of the 
building, yelling at the top of their lungs, the two in front 
brandishing knives. All were riding bareback, expertly guiding the 
horses with their knees and feet, leaving their hand free to hit out 
at the few agents not quick enough to get out of the way. The 
two in front split, each herding a few of the agents sideways, the 
horse's flying hooves more threatening than the men's flashing 
knives.
	But it was the third rider, breaking through the middle 
that caused the federal agents in front of him to gasp in shock. 
Fox Mulder may have been barely recognizable at first glance 
under the war paint, but no one who had ever met him could miss 
those pitch-black eyes, the shock of disarrayed raven hair, or the 
fiercely determined, stone-carved face under the bright streaks of 
color, as he urged the horse at breakneck speed straight for his 
still-struggling partner. 
	"My God," Skinner breathed, as the ground seemed to 
sway under his feet, causing him to sink to his knees, his gun still 
clasped in a trembling hand. 
	"MULDER!!!!" Scully's voice rose in a shriek as she 
saw him, and taking full advantage of the confusion of her would-
be captor, she broke free and raced straight for him, her loose 
hair flowing behind her like a red banner in the wind.
	"Scully!" Skinner tried to call out in warning, as it 
looked for a moment that she would be trampled by the 
oncoming horse, but abruptly it swung to the side and its rider 
slipped sideways on its back. Everything seemed to go into slow 
motion to the stunned onlookers.  Scully didn't pause, went 
smoothly from running at full speed into a flying leap upwards. 
Mulder swept downwards, his legs tightly gripping the horse, 
reaching out for her with both hands at the instant she reached 
for him.
	And a second later, he was bringing her up with him 
onto the horse's back, as it galloped forward without slowing or 
missing a single step.  When he recovered his seat, upright on the 
horse's back, she was sitting sideways in front of him, legs 
dangling off to one side, clinging to him with all of her strength. 
He tightened his arms around her and urged the horse onward, 
out into the desert.
	A couple of agents recovered their wits in time to raise 
their guns to shoot after the escaping fugitives, but the Navajo's 
were ready, and thrust themselves in front of the guns. The 
agents might have shot anyway, if the ringing voice of the 
Assistant Director hadn't commanded them to hold their fire.  
They hesitated, then gave in, even in the heat of the moment, they 
were not about to risk his ire. Especially after this disaster. With 
a curt wave of his hand, Skinner directed his men back to the 
cars, ignoring the outpourings of mixed outrage and triumph 
from the Indians, as he walked to his car. When all of his men 
were settled in their seats, he opened his door, and got inside...
	...with only one last, half-shocked, half-amazed look out 
at the desert and the already lost image of his renegade agents.
					- - - - -
===========================================================================



	The horse's hooves pounded on the sand and rocks in a 
steady cadence. Nestled into Mulder's arms, the muscles of his 
shoulders flexed under her hands, Scully watched the gathering 
site disappear into the distance.  Once they were fully out of 
sight, angled behind a towering column of red stone, Mulder 
pulled the snorting, sweating horse to a halt and slid to the 
ground, taking Scully with him.
	She laughed out of sheer exuberance, twining her arms 
around his neck. He gave her a brilliant grin as she came down 
across the length of his body, her laughter swallowed into his 
throat as their mouths met and clung. He held her dangling above 
the ground for a moment, then set her feet down square on the 
earth.
	"Oh God, Mulder, that was incredible!" She whispered, 
her glowing face tilted up towards him, her sapphire eyes 
sparkling.  His expression was calmer, but his green-tinged eyes 
danced, and his breath came fast.
	Cupping her cheek in the palm of his hand, he tenderly 
admired her face. "Just an old polo trick." He laughed. "Never 
thought I'd use it again. I wasn't even sure I could pull it off." He 
looked back over his shoulder in the direction from which they 
had come. "I just wish I could have seen Skinner's face."
	Scully grinned, then sobered at the reminder, the flush of 
their escape fading rapidly. "What are we going to do now?"
	Mulder gazed around them, his hands never leaving her 
shoulders.  "I...We're going to need shelter and water." He 
grimaced tightly. "Especially water."
	"Maybe we should have stayed. Talked to Skinner." 
Scully suggested. "If we could have gotten him to listen..."
	"No," Mulder shook his head. "Too much was 
happening too fast. Skinner should have known better than to 
invade the Navajo's sacred ground without permission.  He's 
likely to have a full-scale battle on his hands right now.  Damn it, 
Scully! Skinner is smarter than this. And far too good a politician. 
He must have been desperate to pull such a stunt."
	"Or was forced into it," Scully suggested grimly. Their 
eyes met. 
	"If *they* are behind this..." Mulder was thinking 
furiously, his brow knit in concentration. 
	"If *they* are behind this," Scully echoed. "Then maybe 
you did the right thing getting us out of there. I wouldn't put 
much stock in our survival in their hands." Her voice was 
uncertain, grudging, they seemed to be caught in a trap no matter 
what they did.
	"I don't know, Scully." Mulder admitted. "You could be 
right. It would be hard to make us disappear in front of a dozen 
federal agents. Though I wouldn't put anything past them, I think 
that would be too much even for Skinner. No, we'd just end up 
mired in federal red-tape and endless disciplinary hearings.  They 
will probably try to pin my father and Krycek's deaths on me." He 
bit at his lower lip. "I don't have an easy answer, love, but I 
would much prefer to meet up with Skinner on more neutral 
territory. To have at least some control over the situation."
	Scully both understood and shared his feelings, but right 
now they had more pressing problems. The heat of the midday 
desert sun was beating down on them without mercy, and after 
the round of dancing and the burst of adrenaline from the fight 
and their reckless ride, she was already feeling thirsty. 
Dehydration would catch them soon, as would sunstroke if they 
didn't find some shade.
	"Right now I'd settle for some water and a roof over our 
heads," she said, shielding her eyes as she peered around them.
	"Yeah, it might be a good idea to backtrack to the 
stream. If we go at an angle, maybe we can meet up with it far 
enough from the gathering ground to miss Skinner's goon squad."
	Scully frowned. She had only the slightest idea of where 
they were, even in relationship to the ritual site. And Mulder's 
sense of direction was horrible. She didn't like the idea of 
wandering around in this heat in unfamiliar territory. If they got 
lost, they could be swallowed up by the desert, to die of 
dehydration and starvation. 
	Mulder caught the look of fear on her face and felt his 
stomach sink. She didn't have to say it, he knew as well as she did 
how vulnerable they were to elements without even a single 
canteen of water.  It was humiliating to turn around and give 
themselves up, especially after their exhilarating escape. But, in 
the end, the decision was made for them, there was no place to 
go. They'd simply have to take their chances with the powers-
that-be. Anything was better than ending up a pair of bleached 
white skeletons picked clean by the buzzards, abandoned and 
alone among the rocks.
	So when Mulder spoke aloud, it wasn't a question, it 
was a simple statement. "We have to go back."
						- - - - -

	Skinner spent the long, bumpy ride back to Farmington 
silently cursing himself with every invective he knew, an 
impressive array gathered over his years in government service.  
He should have known better, HAD known better, than to raid a 
Navajo religious ceremony. He had let his frustration get out of 
control, instead of staking out the ceremony and picking up his 
two fugitive agents as they left, he had gone charging in 
recklessly, guns blazing. He had gotten tired of sitting and 
waiting, tired of going in circles, hitting a dead end on all sides. 
No one was answering his questions - not the Navajo, not his 
superiors, not the other government 'agencies' involved, and 
especially not Mulder and Scully. 
	Now all he could do was damage control. Hope that the 
Indians didn't make a federal case out of this mess. Hope that 
Mulder and Scully would decide to come in of their own accord. 
Hope that he still had a job left when the dust cleared.
	Fat chance.
					- - - - -

	Mulder gave the horse his head, pointed it back in the 
direction from which they had come, and urged the beast to go 
home. He hoped that given the chance it would head for the 
nearest source of water, the stream along which the Navajo had 
placed their gathering site. The horse seemed to go in the right 
direction, though the distance seemed to stretch out to twice the 
length it had been on their break-neck ride away. But finally, they 
saw the squat, round forms of the buildings, both breathing in 
deep sighs of relief.
	As they got closer, Mulder glanced around anxiously, 
wishing for some kind of cover. Still half a mile away, he stopped 
the horse and dismounted.
	"What are you doing?" Scully asked, sliding to the 
ground beside him.
	"I don't like the idea of just trotting in there and saying, 
Hi! We're back, Come shoot us!" Mulder answered.
	"I don't like it much myself, but I don't see much of an 
alternative." She glanced around at the empty landscape. "It's not 
like there are trees and bushes we can hide under."
	"I know. But I refuse to make it that easy for them." 
With that he released the horse and gave it a loud slap on its rear 
end. It jolted, then broke into a run towards the buildings.
	"Mulder!" Scully exclaimed in protest as the animal 
quickly left them behind.
	"It's not that long of a walk, Scully. I want to scout the 
place out a little if we can. We'll be less conspicuous on foot."
	Scully gave him a doubtful look, but fell in step beside 
him. She might have argued if she had a better plan, but she 
didn't. So she might as well go along with him for now. 'As 
always,' a small voice whispered in her head, but she ignored it. 
She was getting good at ignoring that little voice.
					- - - - -

	Skinner didn't know how they did it, but there were 
already protesters outside the Farmington police station by the 
time they arrived.  A small crowd of Navajo, decked out in 
traditional costumes, were milling on the sidewalk outside the 
station, watched over by a weary, sweat-soaked contingent of 
police. How had they gotten there so fast? Maybe this was 
something else, he thought hopefully as he exited the car.
	No such luck, he realized grimly, as he caught the angry 
shouts about desecration of sacred rites, and the vividly 
expressed, always boiling hatred for the federal interlopers. As he 
and his men tried to push their way into the building, a rising 
chant took over the street, "FBI go home, FBI go home, FBI go 
home..." Not particularly intellectual, but simple and effective.
	The rush of cold air and the quiet within the station was 
a welcome relief. Skinner mopped at his brow, stalking briskly 
towards his appropriated office. The phone call he was about to 
make was not going to be easy.
					- - - - -

	Mulder inched across the ground behind the squat, 
reddish-brown hut. The skin of his hands quickly reddened and 
burnt on the hot, sharp-edged rocks, and even through the cloth, 
his knees were already bruised. But if he could just get close 
enough to the building without being seen, then...
	"Fall of your horse?" Albert Hosteen's words were 
bland, but there was no mistaking the amusement on his craggy 
features.
	Mulder jerked, then rolled over onto his side, abruptly 
aware of the shadow looming over his legs. He opened his 
mouth, then shut it, then groaned slightly and sat up. So much for 
the stealthy approach. Rubbing the sweat out of his eyes with the 
back of his hand, streaking dust and paint across his face, he 
decided to settle for a simple question. "Are they gone?"
	Albert nodded, finally stirring himself to offer a hand to 
the man sitting at his feet. Mulder took it gratefully, levering 
himself to his feet. Once he was standing Mulder had a few 
inches on the older Navajo, which made him a tiny bit less 
embarrassed. Height had its advantages, if only to steal some self-
esteem.
	"They took off as soon as the two of you were gone," 
Albert explained, while Mulder attempted to brush himself off.  
"That was some riding!" Albert grinned. "You should have seen 
the faces of your colleagues, they looked like they had seen a 
ghost."
	Mulder flashed a smile, then his expression sobered as 
together they turned to walk around the building. "They may yet 
HAVE seen a ghost. After this fiasco, Scully and I may never be 
able to go back. Skinner is going to be furious." The mention of 
Scully's name instantly reminded him that he had left her on the 
other side of the site. "Scully...I left her..."
	"Don't worry," Albert reassured. "She came back a few 
minutes ago." His expression was admiring as he thought about 
the small red-haired agent. "Just walked right into the middle of 
everything. That is some woman you have there."
	Mulder shook his head, though he couldn't help letting 
the corners of his mouth curl upward. So much for his attempt at 
stealth. Leave it to Scully to march straight in. He ought to be 
furious, but as always, he couldn't help feeling a sense of pride in 
the woman who was both his partner and his love. They rounded 
the corner, and quickly joined a small crowd of men and women, 
sitting in a circle around the now-damaged sand drawings. Scully 
was seated across the circle, sipping at a canteen of water. Her 
blue eyes twinkled as she leaned back to stare up at her tall 
partner.
	"What took you so long, Mulder?" she asked innocently.
	"I decided to commune with the earth for a while." He 
commented wryly, as he slid to the ground beside her, the woman 
next to her scuttling sideways to make room for him. "You 
should try it sometime."
	Somewhat relieved he wasn't annoyed, though she 
would NEVER have admitted it, Scully rewarded him with her 
warmest smile. "Another time," she said, offering him the canteen 
as a peace offering.
	He took it, saluting her with it before he took a deep 
gulp of the soothing water. It was an incredible relief to wash 
away the grit that had managed to permeate his mouth and 
throat, as well as every other part of his body. It was difficult to 
restrain himself from pouring it on top of his head, but he knew 
better than to waste to precious water. Instead, he took one more 
smaller sip, then handed the half-empty waterbag back to Scully.
	Albert had seated himself nearby. The circle sat 
soundless for a few moments, then one of the leaders began to 
speak in Navajo. Another answered him, until there was a roaring 
discussion, shooting back and forth, words accompanied by 
vigorous hand gestures. Scully frowned, able to catch no more 
than an occasional word. The look of fierce, taut concentration 
on Mulder's face, indicated that he was catching more, though 
not enough to satisfy him. Finally, he leaned forward and caught 
Albert's attention. He had something to say.
	Albert indicated that he understood, and quietly raised 
his hand in the air, palm facing the interior of the circle. Slowly, 
the debate died down, until he had everyone's attention. Then he 
pointed towards Mulder, who began to speak in halting Navajo. 
<"We apologize for what has happened. We did not meant to 
bring desecration upon your sacred place. We will leave, if you 
wish, and give ourselves to the FBI.>
	"No," Albert spoke in English, recognizing the growing 
frustration in Scully's expression. "You can not blame yourselves 
for the actions of others. You were our chosen guests, and it is 
we as your hosts, who should be apologizing for the endangering 
your lives here."
	Scully was delighted to have some understanding of 
what was happening, and she protested quickly. "You have 
nothing to apologize for. We knew that they would be coming 
after us, and should have been more careful of your lives."
	That won several nods of approval, though mostly out 
of respect. Albert continued to speak for the assembly. "It is 
over, assigning blame is useless, especially since it belongs to the 
FBI agents who violated our sacred ground. Protests are already 
being lodged by others. Our duties here are to cleanse this place 
of the violence that occurred today, and to decide what you 
should do next, Truth Seeker."
	Mulder jolted slightly, he was still not used to that 
nickname. He wished someone would call him something normal 
for a change. He was definitely beginning to consider changing 
his name to Harry, and Scully's grin didn't help.
	"Unh...I think it might be best if we left," Mulder 
replied. "We've put you in enough danger already. You could 
face federal charges for hiding us." He turned towards Scully, his 
hazel eyes glittering like diamonds as they reflected the bright 
sunshine. "And we'll never find who killed my father by staying 
here."
	Scully had to agree, although she couldn't help feeling 
terrified at leaving their safe-haven. They knew there were men 
out there who had tried to destroy them both, not to mention the 
law enforcement machine that considered them both renegades at 
best. Murderers at worst. Running away was not the answer, 
however, and her gaze was determined as she met Mulder's eyes.
	He easily read her agreement, and a rush of pleasure 
flooded him at her support. Their eyes locked, the space between 
suddenly not there, they felt connected, bound to each other.
	The instant of understanding faded quickly, as Albert 
spoke out. "I doubt we are in much danger. The FBI is going to 
be too embarrassed by today to bother trying to arrest anyone 
here." There was no small satisfaction in his voice. "Already our 
people are speaking out. You do not need to go for that reason. 
However, we do understand your need to find the truth about 
your father's death, and avenge his spirit so that it can rest 
peacefully. If it is your wish to leave us, we will help you in 
anyway we can." This statement won nods of support from the 
others.
	"We do need to go, but maybe not right away." Scully 
said. Mulder looked at her in surprise. "You said you wanted to 
meet with Skinner on safe ground," she explained. "I think we 
should do just what we had planned." She gazed over at Albert. 
"If you could get my letter and the evidence to Skinner somehow, 
we may be able to convince him to meet with us alone. I'd rather 
get him out here, than try to talk to him where he is under 
pressure from the rest of the Bureau - and other places - to take 
us down."
	Mulder bit at his lower lip, she was right. "I know its a 
lot to ask of you, Albert, but..."
	Albert smiled. "It is no problem at all. We would be glad 
to help." His grin widened. "Watching you steal Dana out from 
under their noses the way you did this morning..." He chuckled. 
"It is was a great gift to see the feds so utterly confounded. I 
think a couple of them pissed in their pants." His amusement was 
infectious, several of the Navajo started laughing uproariously.
	Mulder chuckled under his breath. "Glad you enjoyed 
it."
					- - - - -

	"Yes, Sir....I'm sorry, sir...Yes, I'm certain that it was 
Mulder and Scully." The image of Mulder, clad in Navajo dress, 
face angry and determined under the bright streaks of paint, 
flashed in front of Skinner's eyes, and he shook his head as 
though clearing away cobwebs. If he hadn't seen it with his own 
eyes... but why be surprised at anything Fox Mulder did? Or to 
put it more correctly, everything Mulder did was a surprise, so 
why bother expecting anything else? Skinner played with the 
moisture beading the rim of the glass of iced-water in front of 
him, and forced himself to concentrate on the FBI Director's 
words.
	"No, sir, yes, sir," he responded. Then he could finally 
get a word in edgewise. "No, I do not believe that Agent Mulder 
killed his father...Yes, I know the evidence is damning, but it is 
all circumstantial. The bullet that killed William Mulder did not 
come from Agent Mulder's gun, which the bureau still has in its 
possession...Yes, I know he could have had another weapon, but 
I know Agent Mulder. He may be reckless, rebellious, 
intransigent, but he's no killer...Yes, I know he attacked me." 
Skinner rubbed his jaw in memory of that punch
 	"But I think that was frustration," he continued. 
"Mulder quieted down quickly...uh huh...I think that its more 
likely someone tried to kill Agent Mulder, and his father got in 
the way...Agent Krycek, Yes, he may have been involved in 
Agent Scully's kidnapping...We didn't find a gun on Krycek, 
perhaps Mulder took it...I have no proof of this, sir, I'm only 
theorizing...I think its possible that Krycek tried to kill Mulder, 
Mulder's father got in the way, then Mulder killed Krycek to 
avenge his father...Yes, its also possible it was self-defense...We 
don't know, sir, Mulder and Scully have not contacted 
anyone...Yes, except the Navajo...We are doing everything we 
can to calm these people down...I don't know, sir, but Mulder 
can be good with people. He is a trained psychologist, and can be 
very persuasive...Yes, they are calling him "The Truth Seeker.he 
appears to have become a hero to the Navajo. They don't like the 
FBI much...Yes, I know Mulder is an FBI agent, but he's 
different. We wouldn't be in this mess if he was an ordinary 
agent...We're doing everything we can to find him and his 
partner, but they're out in the desert somewhere. Without Navajo 
cooperation, it will be nearly impossible...Yes, sir...Yes, we will 
keep looking...Yes...Yes, sir,...Good-bye, Sir."
	Skinner hung up the receiver and buried his face in his 
hands with a deep long sigh. 
	<KNOCK KNOCK KNOCK> A quick staccato beat 
sounded on the door. 
	"Come in," Skinner called out sharply.
	"Sir," Jordan stuck his head in the door. "One of the 
Navajo leaders would like to speak with you."
	What now, Skinner thought. "Alright, Jordan, send him 
in."
	Jordan backed out the door briefly, then re-entered 
followed by a gray-haired Navajo with craggy features, large 
nose, and solemn black eyes. He was in good-shape for his age, 
despite the slight bulge around his middle, and his face was alert 
and intelligent.
	"Shaman Albert Hosteen, Assistant Director Skinner," 
Jordan introduced them, then left the room in response to a 
dismissive wave from his boss.
	"What can I do for you, Mr. Hosteen?" Skinner asked, 
indicating the chair on the other side of the desk.
	Before seating himself in the chair, Albert put a small, 
newspaper-wrapped package on the desk. "A friend asked me to 
give this to you," Leaning back in the chair, he carefully studied 
the FBI chief. A balding middle-aged man with penetrating 
brown eyes behind wire-rimmed glasses, Walter Skinner had the 
body of a weight-lifter and the straight-backed, authoritative 
demeanor of a military officer.
	"What is it?" Skinner reached out towards it, then pulled 
his hand back. Distrust came easily.
	Albert grinned. "It's not a bomb, Director. I'd hardly still 
be here if it was."
	"I didn't..." Skinner shook his head, trying to ignore the 
Navajo's amusement. He felt like they had been having far too 
much fun at his expense lately. Feeling Albert's eyes on him, he 
finally picked up the package and weighed it in his hands. It was 
light, and lumpy, a couple of objects loose inside.
	A questioning look on his face, he ripped the newsprint 
open, then spread the contents out onto the desk. A small plastic 
bag held the recognizably smashed metal lump that constituted a 
discharged bullet. Beside it lay the cool, hard shape of a handgun, 
also plastic-wrapped. There was a small, unsealed envelope with 
folded paper inside, and a bagged object that Skinner didn't 
recognize. Pointing at it, he asked, "What is this?"
	Albert shrugged. "Read the letter. It's some kind of 
filter, I think. It's the stuff in it that you will probably be 
interested in."	
	"Which is..." 
	Skinner opened the letter, his voice dropping off as he 
recognized the scrawled signature on the bottom of the short, 
hand-written missive: the signature of Special Agent Dana Scully.
					- - - - -
===========================================================================



	Shifting uncomfortably in the saddle, Skinner wished he 
had insisted on four-wheel transportation. It was not that he 
couldn't handle physical hardship, after all he'd spent five years as 
a marine in Vietnam. But it had been a while since his work had 
been outside an office, and despite rigorous habitual exercise, the 
desk-work was taking its toll along with the ravages of age. Add 
the fact that he had never been on a horse before in his life, and 
he was soon praying that he never got on one of the damned 
animals again.
	Albert managed not to smile too broadly at the FBI 
man's obvious discomfort as they rode side-by-side below the 
cliffs. As Dana had hoped, their boss had been willing to listen - 
skeptical, innately cautious and distrustful - but he had read her 
letter and considered the evidence. The bullet, gun and filter had 
been shipped off to some lab in Washington, while Skinner did 
his best to interrogate Albert. The Navajo shaman had responded 
to the questioning with patient amusement, but little information. 
Even now, Albert had told Skinner no more than that he would 
guide him to his missing agents.
	Thus, they were on horseback, riding for long hours into 
the desert. Skinner had traded his suit for jeans, polo shirt, and a 
windbreaker that was tied around his waist, in the hope of 
gaining some increased comfort. It hadn't worked, the heavy rays 
of the sun making him long for a cold beer and his air-
conditioned office. 
	Just as he was beginning to think that he'd just been led 
on another wildgoose-chase by the Navajo, Skinner saw the faint 
shape of a building on the horizon. As he squinted, eyes sun-
struck even behind prescription sunglasses, Albert pointed at the 
squat round shape just around the bend of the stream-bed.
	"There," he said simply.
					- - - - -

	Dana Scully heard the sound of horse's hooves clattering 
on the rocks, and rocked back onto her heels by the stream bed. 
Eyes shielded by a dripping hand, she could just make out the 
two horseman, one sitting solid on the brown animal, the other 
shifting as he rode, the sun glinting off his bare head. Damn, 
Albert and Skinner were early, she hadn't expected them for 
another couple of hours. Now, instead of being neatly dressed 
and groomed in her Western clothes, clean and hair in place, she 
was a mess. 	
	Washing clothes in the stream, while convenient, had 
left her sweaty and dirty. She was dressed in the white Navajo 
robe that had functioned as a bedrobe for Mulder while he was 
ill, but now it was dirty and wet, clinging to her naked body 
underneath. As she stood up wearily, feeling the ache in her 
lower back from spending too long bent over, she tugged at the 
hem. At least on her it fell well below the knees,  she smiled, it a 
good thing Mulder wasn't wearing the robe. Tucking loose 
copper strands of hair behind her eyes, she sighed and cast 
around for her partner.
	Mulder was several feet away, facing away from their 
arriving guests. He was pumping at the hand-crank on the well, 
drawing buckets of water for the bath they had planned to take. 
Even as flustered as she felt, she couldn't help admiring the way 
the trim muscles in his back and shoulders flexed and the sheen of 
his sweaty skin in the midday sun. Her fingers itched to explore 
his spine, then run up through the soft black hair that curled 
against the back of his neck. 
	Enough, Dana, she told herself sharply, though there 
was a knot of disappointment in her belly regarding the bath they 
were going to miss, a regret that had little to do with being 
prepared to meet with their boss. A sigh whistled through her 
teeth, as she decided that there was little she could do. Calling 
out Mulder's name to give him some warning, she leaned over to 
pick up the small pile of clothes she had been cleaning, then rose 
to her feet just as the riders came up close and halted.
	Albert inclined his head at her gravely, though his eyes 
were bright obsidian as he dismounted. Skinner sat on his horse, 
suddenly grateful the sunglasses hid his eyes. He'd seen a number 
of sides to the Dana Scully, but nothing like this. Even the 
struggling savage he'd seen several days before had been...a part 
of her he could expect. She was, as always, a tough, determined 
professional. A strong, courageous woman, who never lost her 
femininity, though it was never overt. Until now. 
	Now he was staring at a woman who was ALL woman, 
from her muddy bare feet, to the wind-caught strands of her 
brilliant hair. She was clutching a pile of wet clothes just under 
her breasts, whose nipples showed as dark points against the thin 
white, soaked, fabric of her knee-length dress. Her face was 
sunburnt and waiting, her blue eyes calm as the long-distant sea. 
She was lovely, no beyond lovely...breathtaking. And he found 
himself gasping as he released the air held for too long in his 
lungs.
	Using the need to dismount from the horse to cover his 
embarrassing response, he slid to the ground. A small groan 
forced its way through his lips as the cramped muscles 
complained vigorously. He handed the reins over to Albert 
willingly, rubbing at his backside, and trying to ignore the 
screams from his sore thighs.
	By the time he looked over at the waiting Scully, 
Mulder had walked up behind her, a sloshing water bucket 
dangled from each hand. Skinner watched as the agent put down 
both buckets, his bare and arms and shoulders working, the 
muscles standing out in sharp relief under bare, sweat-coated 
skin. At least the paint and native costumes were gone, but 
Mulder still managed to look primitive. His jeans sat low on his 
hips, baring this tight stomach and navel, hugging his legs tightly. 
He was less dusty than his partner, but it was obvious he had 
been active in the sun, his skin was deeply, evenly bronzed, 
highlighting the green-tint of his hazel eyes.
	Together, they looked more like a pair of American 
pioneers than modern federal agents, and the surroundings only 
strengthened that impression. They could have been a married 
couple, struggling to make a living from the frontier wilderness, 
living in the small, angular cabin in the desert. But they weren't, 
he reminded himself sharply, as they returned his stare, studying 
him silently in return. The tall, dark man was an Oxford-educated 
behavioral psychologist, with a brilliant, ranging intellect. The 
woman was a medical doctor, an expert forensic pathologist just 
as much at home in a laboratory as she was in this godforsaken 
corner of an Indian reservation. And he was their boss. And they 
had a lot of explaining to do.
	Straightening his back, Skinner drew himself back into 
control, easily asserting his natural, and well-trained, authority. 
Ignoring the slight sense of the ridiculous at the words, he said 
their names as through they were standing in front of his desk in 
Washington. "Agent Scully, Agent Mulder."
	Mulder and Scully exchanged a quick glance, then 
Scully spoke first. "Assistant Director Skinner, I'm glad you were 
able to come on such short notice." Instantly, she managed to 
assume her professional demeanor, Skinner could almost see her 
in one of her navy suits, imagine that the loose cloud of hair was 
pinned into a neat bun, that the bare feet were encased in sensible 
pumps; the transformation inherent in the sound of her voice.
	"Perhaps we should go inside and sit down," she 
continued. "You must be thirsty after the long ride." She stepped 
forward, then turned to walk by him towards the cabin, treading 
easily on the ground, her back held straight and proud. Mulder 
waved Skinner before him, their eyes clashing for a moment, 
Skinner's hidden by the dark glasses, Mulder's dark and 
indecipherable. Skinner nodded and proceeded him into the 
shelter, Mulder picking up the buckets of water, Albert falling 
into step with Mulder when he was through settling the horses.
	Giving Skinner the one chair, Mulder placed the buckets 
on the counter. Dipping a cloth into one, he rubbed some of the 
sweat off his body, then reached for the tee-shirt laying on the 
edge of the unmade bed. While he slipped the blue cloth over his 
shoulders, Scully was pouring water from a jug kept in a small 
hollow in the ground in the darkest corner of the hut. It was luke-
warm, the heat of the sun penetrating everywhere, but it was 
enough to refresh. She handed out the glasses, then sat down 
beside Mulder on the side of the bed, primly adjusting the hem of 
her dress over her knees. 
	Albert perched himself against the counter, effacing 
himself. This was their business, not his, and he ready to be 
patient.
	The three federal agents sat eyeing each other nervously 
for a moment, no one quite ready to be the first to speak. Finally, 
Mulder cleared his throat and spoke his first words since Skinner 
had arrived.
	"Did you find out what was in the dialysis filter?" he 
asked. That question had dogged his mind since Scully had first 
told him about it, feeling the need to know what they had 
pumped into his unknowing system.
	Skinner grimaced and nodded. "I don't remember the 
exact chemical name for it, but it was a recombinant hormone 
that would stimulate aggressive behavior, as well as intense 
paranoia. It should cause an inability to sleep, feelings of 
restlessness and unease, and sudden outbursts of emotion. You, 
and the woman Scully wrote to me about, weren't the only ones 
affected. Since you left Washington, there were two beatings and 
one more killing in your building. Not to mention a rash of 
domestic disturbance. We found one more filter like the one you 
took, Scully, still in place. The health authorities have shut down 
the water supply to the building while a thorough investigation of 
the entire system is being done."
	"Those bastards!" Mulder swore under his breath, 
shaking his head. His eyes glittered as he turned his gaze in 
Skinner. "I don't suppose there's any trace of who did it." This 
was a statement, and Skinner didn't bother to reply.
	"What about Krycek? He was alive and unharmed when 
we left." Scully broke in, even as she placed a reassuring, 
restraining hand on Mulder's arm. The gesture did not go 
unnoticed by their boss' sharp blue eyes.
	"There was an anonymous phone call to the police, 
alerting them to a murder in your apartment. They arrived, found 
the door wide open and Krycek dead on your floor. He had been 
beaten up, then his neck broken in a professional manner, though 
any law enforcement officer with training, or any medical doctor 
could easily duplicate it. Which made you two the most likely 
suspects, especially when you disappeared." Skinner's temper 
finally broke. "What the HELL did you think you were doing, 
running off to New Mexico without a word. Of all the stupid..."
	"We were running for our lives!" Scully interrupted, her 
voice knife-edged. "They had already killed Mulder's father, 
almost killed me, drugged Mulder. He was sick and wounded, 
and there was no one I could trust."	
	"You could have trusted me," Skinner said angrily.
	"Why should I have? Half the time you're with them, we 
never know where you stand." Scully was too angry to bother 
with being politic. "Besides, you were furious with Mulder for 
attacking you. And even if you were willing to listen, there might 
not have been much you could do if they really wanted us dead."
	"I've done everything I can to protect you," Skinner was 
equally furious. "But YOU make it impossible." He glared at 
Mulder. "I've never met anyone with more talent for getting into 
trouble. And YOU never listen. I tell you to sit quiet on 
surveillance duty, and you run off to Puerto Rico and nearly get 
yourself killed. I warn you that you are in danger, and you mess 
around with stolen DOD documents. Do you have a death-wish 
or something, Agent Mulder!"
	"I have a wish for the truth!" Mulder bit off the words, 
his gut twisting. Skinner's words had hit deep. He didn't WANT 
to die, he didn't...did he. The memories of the time when Scully 
had been gone rocked him, along with the knowledge that he had 
indeed wanted to die then. Life without her was too painful to 
bear. But she WAS with him now, so he did want to live. He 
seized on that desire and held tightly to it. There were things he 
was willing to die for, but not without a fight. He had reasons to 
live, two of them at least: the warm vibrant woman by his side, 
and his promise to his sister. I'll find you Samantha, he thought 
fiercely. I will find you.
	"There are times for the truth, and times to wait." 
Skinner responded. "You can't expose anything if you're buried 
six-feet underground. Or in jail. Or drugged out on exotic 
chemicals," he pointed out stringently. "If you don't start using 
the brains God gave you, you're going to fall flat on your face." 
His next sentence was enunciated slowly and distinctly. "And I 
will not always be able to pick you up." Mulder's face was grim, 
his cheekbones standing out in high relief, his mouth set, jaw 
thrust forward. He said nothing.
	"You almost lost it all this time. Do you know how 
close you came to spending the rest of your life in prison. There 
are still questions to be answered about the deaths of your father 
and Krycek by other authorities. Even now, I may not be able to 
get you off the hook for it, either of you." He looked from 
Mulder's gritted features, to Scully's no-less determined face.
	"You have the proof that Mulder was drugged, and 
Krycek's gun. It matched the bullet from Mulder's father, doesn't 
it." Scully argued.
	"Yes," Skinner nodded. "But the gun was in YOUR 
possession, and it had no fingerprints on it at all." He looked at 
her suspiciously, and she felt a slight blush redden her cheeks. 
For the first time, she felt grateful for the sunburn that effectively 
hid her rising color. She hadn't felt right about wiping the gun, 
but Mulder's fingerprints had been all over it.
	"Want to tell me again what happened that night, Agent 
Scully?" Skinner asked, watching her closely.
	She drew in a breath, then told him. "I went to pull the 
bullet from Mulder's wall. As I was about to leave, I saw an 
unmarked van delivering and removing water tanks. Mulder's 
behavior had been...erratic...I got suspicious. So I went down to 
the basement and found that the water had been tampered with. I 
took the filter and went outside." She turned to Mulder, waiting 
for his approval before finishing. He bit at his lower lip, then gave 
her silent agreement. She read his eyes, then turned back to 
Skinner.
	"When I came out the back door, I found Mulder 
holding Krycek's gun on him. I knew it wasn't Mulder's gun 
because I had turned his over to the bureau crime lab earlier to 
prove it wasn't the one used to kill his father. Mulder was upset, 
certain that Krycek had murdered his father. I pulled my gun on 
Krycek and attempted to talk Mulder into turning Krycek over to 
me. He refused, and started to pull the trigger."
	She took a deep breath and swallowed. "I didn't know 
what else to do. I shot Mulder in the shoulder." 
	"What?!" Skinner jolted in his seat. This had not been in 
her letter.
	Mulder rubbed at his left shoulder with a grimace. 
"Knocked me flat. I was pretty zoned out, so its not too clear. I 
remember pain, and hitting the concrete. Then not much else."
	"Krycek took off immediately, not bothering to pick up 
his weapon." Scully explained. "I checked to make sure Mulder 
was not seriously hurt, then heard a woman screaming about 
calling the police. I was certain Mulder's life was in danger, so I 
did my best to get him into the car. He woke up enough to help 
me move him, then fell unconscious again in the car. I stopped at 
my apartment long enough to get some antibiotic ointment, 
sedative, and bandages, then took off. I had a line on a Navajo 
translator," she gestured at Albert who was listening in the 
corner. "So I decided New Mexico was as good a place to go as 
any other. Mulder needed the time to flush the drug out of his 
system, and I needed the time to think. So we came here."
	"Then what?" Skinner prompted, getting drawn into her 
tale despite himself.
	"Albert translated as much as he could, while Mulder 
recovered. The Navajo had found something in the desert that 
would supply physical proof, so Mulder went out to look at it."
	Mulder took over here. "I found a mostly buried wreck 
of a train that contained hundreds of bodies, skeletons."
	"What?" Skinner was uncomfortably aware that he was 
repeating himself.
	"They were misshapen, had the appearance of being 
alien at first glance." Skinner was about to make a scathing 
comment, when the sense of the last words struck him. "But they 
weren't alien...?"
	Mulder shook his head. "Don't know. They had enlarged 
eye sockets and arms, and tiny bodies. But they also had 
smallpox vaccination scars. I don't know what they were and I 
never got the time to find out more." His voice turned bitter. 
"Your friend, Cancerman, came bursting in with a helicopter full 
of armed soldiers. They blew up the boxcar, and almost got me 
as well. Luckily the earthquake had created fault lines in the 
cliffs, I was able to escape through the rocks. I think they must 
have thought I was dead."
	Skinner shrugged. "I haven't heard a word from him, or 
his...people. I wondered why he never showed up. I guessed he 
was pleased enough with the mess you had gotten yourself into 
that he didn't feel the need to interfere."
	"More likely, he thought you were chasing a dead man." 
Mulder commented wryly. Then he grinned wryly. "I'm glad to 
disappoint them."
	"Me, too." Scully said. She brushed the hair of her face, 
then said thoughtfully. "Though I'm beginning to think that they 
weren't planning to kill you." At both men's looks of surprise, she 
flashed a smile, then settled her face into grim lines. "Why go to 
all the trouble to drug you? They wanted you to destroy yourself. 
If they kill you, it gives credence to your work. If you self-
destruct, it makes your ideas the ramblings of the insane. They 
killed your father, tried to kill me in order to help isolate you 
from anyone who would care enough to help."
	Mulder and Skinner both considered, and accepted the 
sense of her words. 
	Responding seriously, Mulder asked, "What now? Even 
if we clear me of the two murders, that still leaves THEM. I can't 
watch everything I eat and drink, everyone who comes near me. I 
know people consider me paranoid already," he gave his 
mischievous grin with that thought. "But I can't live like that. I 
refuse to live like that." His features stilled.
	"I don't think they will try anything now," Skinner said 
slowly. "You are far too public. Front-page news right now, 
especially with the...the Indian complication." His careful choice 
of words won a snicker of amusement from the previously silent 
Albert. Skinner shot him a look of irritation, that did not phase 
the Navajo Shaman at all. 
	Scully tightened her fingers on Mulder's arm as she 
spoke the obvious. "We just have to go on with our lives. If 
someone is going to try to kill us, there's no way to stop them. 
No one is totally safe, ever."
	Mulder frowned, he knew that, but he hated hearing her 
say it. He wanted to protect her, to keep her safe from all harm. 
And yet, he needed her. She had saved his life more than once, 
and he knew she would be furious if he tried to be protective. So 
he accepted the truth of her words with resignation. 	"Scully's 
right. We'll just have to take our chances and hope they decide to 
pull back in the face of the publicity."
	Skinner nodded. There was little else to do. Then 
Skinner lifted his head, giving Mulder his best marine look. 
"Where on earth did you learn to ride like that?"	
	"Oxford," Mulder replied. At Skinner's disbelieving 
look, he explained further. "You are looking at an All-England 
Polo champ, 1982." Skinner shook his head slightly.
	Mulder grinned, Scully chuckled. "I have a trophy 
somewhere, if you want to see it when we get back."
	Skinner sighed, breathing the word like a curse. "Polo."
 					*****
	Their conversation lasted long into evening. Skinner 
took them through every moment of that week in exacting detail, 
over and over. They returned the favor, drinking in news of the 
outside world. The final decisions were not hard to make, it was 
time for them to leave the safe haven of the reservation and 
return to the fray. They would have some tough days ahead, but 
for the first time in a couple weeks, they felt they had a chance.
	Scully had been relieved to hear that her family had 
stood up to this well, and had laughed openly at Skinner's 
description of her mother storming into his office, demanding to 
know what had happened to her daughter. Margaret Scully was a 
quiet, gentle woman, except where the welfare of her children 
was concerned. And since Dana's abduction, her mother had 
come to consider her daughter's partner as one of her own. 
Margaret had simply adopted Mulder in her own mind and heart, 
and that was that. Scully women were not easy to argue with 
once they got an idea fixed in their heads, as Skinner had found 
out the hard way. It had taken every bit of his persuasive ability 
to keep her from coming to New Mexico to track her missing 
children; he had finally resorted to using her concern against her, 
convincing her she needed to be home in case they tried to 
contact her. 
	Mulder and Scully were both amazed by the furor 
occurring in Farmington over the aborted raid on the Navajo 
ceremony. Albert had told them his people were protesting, but 
neither agent had thought this would extend to the street rallies 
and sit-downs in federal buildings that were now occurring across 
the country. Native American activists had seized on the 
situation, turning it into a free-for-all. And that, in the end, was 
the best security Mulder and Scully had. The FBI director and the 
Attorney General were both desperate to clean things up and 
soothe the angry tempers. It wouldn't protect them forever, but it 
would give them a bargaining advantage for the moment. 
Something they desperately needed right now.
	Finally, they all settled down for sleep, deciding to 
postpone the return ride to the next day. Albert setting his 
sleeping bag outside, Mulder and Scully politely handing the bed 
over to their boss before spreading out blankets on the floor. In 
return, Skinner held his tongue about the two of them curling up 
in each other's arms to sleep together. They had enough to worry 
about already, a minor violation of FBI protocol could wait - for 
now.
	In the dark of the night, Scully pressed her head against 
Mulder's shoulder and felt his arms tighten around her. She could 
feel his anxiety even as she felt her own. Leaving this place would 
not be easy, it had been a refuge, a place of peace and joy for 
them. But the outside world was waiting to entangle them, to 
push and pull them into its dangers. They were ready for it, but 
still there was regret. But at least she had the memories to bring 
with her, the few fleeting, precious moments of safety in a 
troubled world. And so she smiled against her partner's chest as 
his sleepy voice whispered against her hair, so softly that only she 
could hear.
	"...Love you..."
					- - - - -

	
Martha's Vineyard
Three Days later

	The cemetery was cool and still in the dawn, the grass 
wet with dew, a slight chill lingering in the sea-fresh air. Mulder 
knelt by his father's grave, letting the bundle of flowers fall from 
his hand to scatter across the freshly packed earth. The 
gravestone was clean and new, the name carved into the hard 
marble: William Fox Mulder. 1931-1995. 
	Plain and simple, the way Bill Mulder would have 
wanted it to be. He had always been a taciturn, closed man, 
holding his feelings tightly within, only letting them out in sudden 
violent fits, most of which had fallen on his only son. The loss of 
Samantha had only aggravated that tendency, turning a quiet man 
into combination of distant stone and raging thunder. Fox felt the 
sharp pang of regret he knew he would carry with him though the 
rest of his life. Despite the pain, the rage, the hurt that ran so 
deeply in him, this had been his father, and he had never failed to 
carry the hope that sometime, somehow, he would win his 
father's approval if not his love. Perhaps it was crazy to still feel 
that need, but it was there, biting at his insides.
	Recent events had carried them closer than they had 
ever gotten, but an assassin's bullet had abruptly robbed them of 
the future. Robbed Fox of any chance of fulfilling his most 
hidden, precious dream. To walk into his father's house with his 
long-lost sister, and be able to say, I found her. To just once see 
respect and approval on his father's face.
	That would never happen now, and his family was even 
more split than it had been, though he'd have doubted before that 
such was possible. His mother was a wreck, hysterically blaming 
Fox for his father's death. She had screamed at the sight of him, 
and was presently in a private sanitarium. Fox had no need for his 
father's money, he had placed it all in a fund to support his 
mother's medical bills.
	Fox rose to his feet and stood motionless over the 
grave, a tall, slender, dark man in a tailored black suit. His tie was 
the only splash of color, and only someone who knew him well 
would realize how somber it was - for him. The breeze played 
with tendrils of straight black hair above a pair of inwardly 
focused dark eyes of an unusual color usually termed hazel for 
lack of a better word. His feet were planted squarely on the 
sweet-smelling grass, but his attention was far, far away. So 
distant, that he did not notice the woman's approach until she was 
standing by his side, bright auburn hair sliding over her shoulders 
as she gazed anxiously up at him.	
	Dana Scully held back the words on the tip of her 
tongue, instantly sensing his mood. So she silently put a hand on 
his arm and waited until he looked down at her. She twined her 
fingers through his and inclined her head towards the car sitting 
just beyond the gates. His fingers convulsed around hers, holding 
onto her hand with all of his strength. Then they turned and 
walked towards away from the graveside, footsteps swallowed by 
the grass, her shoulder nearly brushing his, their hands clasped 
together.
	
The End

