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Article: 20774 of alt.tv.x-files.creative
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From: ab248@FreeNet.Carleton.CA (Elizabeth Holden)
Newsgroups: alt.tv.x-files.creative
Subject: Sentinels (Part 1 of 3)
Date: 1 Jul 1996 13:53:31 GMT
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Disclaimer:  SENTINELS is a crossover story based on the TV show
X-Files and the Marvel mutant comics X-Men, The Uncanny X-Men,
Generation X and X-Force.  So all the X-Files characters (Mulder,
Scully, Skinner, the Smoking Man) are copyright Chris Carter and
Ten Thirteen Productions, while all the X-Men Characters (Charles
Xavier, Wolverine, Storm, Cyclops, Phoenix, and so on) are
copyright Marvel Comics Group and/or Marvel Entertainment Group.
No infringement on any copyright is intended, and this is done for
no profit to myself except my own pleasure and amusement.
 
The alert reader will notice that I have taken some liberties with
the Marvel Universe in order to make it mesh with the world of X-
Files.  That was part of the fun.
 
This is the first time I have posted a story, and I'd love to hear
feedback.  You can e-mail me at ab248@FreeNet.Carleton.Ca.
 
* * *
 
SENTINELS
 
 
Salem Center, Westchester County, New York
Wednesday, October 11
 
    Mike Keenan took a quick route home from school, mostly to
avoid his friends.  He'd been studying late at the high school
library.  This was unlike him, but it kept him and his secrets
safe.  Soon he would have no friends left, which would solve some
of his problems.
    The isolation frightened him, but it was only one fear among
many.  His mother was asking questions.  She noticed how weird
he'd been acting.  She suspected drugs.  He wondered if drugs
would help, but he didn't know where to get them in any case.
    It was dusk as he cycled into the woods, along the old path
he'd followed to school ever since he was a young kid.  It seemed
a long time ago, those carefree days.  He was almost fourteen
now.  He felt much older, as if years had passed in only a few
weeks.  He felt burdened like an old man.
    It was dark on the shadowy path.   His bike hit a root, and
he stopped, looking at the old oak.  He used to sit here, looking
at the stream.  He lay his bike on the ground, and stepped back
under the shelter of the oak that had been his secret hiding
place.  Wearily, he sat on the ground.  He never came here now. 
It wasn't as if he could hide from himself, however much he
tried.
    He heard a sound.  It was so deep it was just on the edge of
his hearing, like the vibration of a motor - an airplane, maybe,
since it came from the sky, but it wasn't a loud sound.  He
couldn't see anything at first.  It was strange.  That was the
last thing he needed - for something else strange to happen.
    His life was nothing but strangeness now.
    He stood up, filled suddenly with the irrational fear that
the thing, the sound, the unseen engine, was coming for him.
    It couldn't be a plane, it didn't sound like a truck, it
wasn't nearly loud enough to be a helicopter.... It was coming
from the west.  He squinted against the sunset, trying to make
out the moving silhouette beyond the leaves of the trees.
    Something huge swooped down towards him.
    He caught a glimpse of red and grey, and began to run. 
Stumbling through bushes, he muttered a curse under his breath. 
He was prey, now.  A victim.  Bait.
    Behind him he heard cold electronic words.  TARGET IN RANGE. 
It sounded like those corny old digital readouts in movies when
they said them aloud.
    FIRING.  Bushes ignited as he crashed through them.  He was
running alongside the stream, but realized suddenly that this was
giving an advantage to the thing that pursued him, giving it
space to manoeuvre.  The sleeve of his jacket caught on a branch,
and tore.  His mum would be upset.
    If he ever saw her alive again.
    He dove over a stump and half-fell down the bank of the
stream.  REFIRING, said the voice.  Why did he have to be chased
by a damn machine that talked to itself?   Why him?  Because he
was different?  Because he was cursed?  Because he wasn't human
any more?
    Or was it just the pattern of bad luck that had destroyed his
life over the past few months?
    There was a flash of red light, and his arm felt the sting of
a burn.  He knew what that was from movies: a laser gun.
    He fell into the water of the stream.  It was deep here, as
he knew it would be.  The cold water made his arm hurt less.  He
blinked to see better under water, getting his vision adjusted to
the changed light.  He lay down on the bottom of the stream, the
surface of the water two feet above him.  He could nestle here as
long as he needed to.  People never thought to look for him under
water.  Maybe the machine would be the same.  Maybe the thing
couldn't see him.  Maybe he'd be safe.
    Breathing the gentle, healing water soothed his panic.  He
could not hear the engine now, or feel the vibrations it had sent
out.  Perhaps he would survive, after all.
    He heard the voice again, its timbre different because he
heard it through the water.  TARGET LOCATED.  FIRING.
    A few feet of water was not enough, after all, to save him
from the blast.  The last thought he had was: if I'm dead, no one
will know I wasn't really human.
    He was wrong.
 
    Two days later, Agent Mulder and his partner Agent Scully
stood by the same stream, examining the burned foliage in a
four-foot radius of the murder site.  A carbonized area
surrounded the spot where the boy had died, like chalk markings
on pavement, like a bomb, like a crop circle.  It looked as if
someone had tried to set fire to the stream.
    Though the area had been trampled in the initial
investigation, it was clear from photographic evidence that the
only footprints leading up to the stream had been the boy's.  His
bicycle had been found a quarter of a mile away, under a tree by
the path.  They could trace his route.  He had been running
heedlessly.  He had torn his jacket, and had been scratched by
thorns.  There was every indication he had been chased, but there
was no evidence of a pursuer.  "It was as if the devil was after
him," said one of the cops, running a hand through greasy hair.
     "He didn't get home from school when he said," explained the
Sheriff. "He never did that.  Then we got an anonymous phone
call, telling us to look here.  We found the body, and the burned
foliage, as you see.  Never could trace the call."     
     Mike Keenan had fallen over a stump, and gone into the
stream.  He had died there, but not by drowning.
    Back at the car they met the sheriff, waiting patiently for
them.  "Saw what you need to see?"
    "We saw the murder site," said Mulder.
    "Looks as if someone dropped a bomb," said Scully.
    "On a kid?  It gets weirder.  Wait till you see the body."
    "Right," said Scully testily.  She had been requesting to see
the body for two hours now, but they had wanted her to see the
location of the death first.  There was some secrecy going on,
knowing looks passed between sheriff and coroner and
receptionist.
    As they got into the car, Mulder said conversationally, "Nice
area.  What's around here?"
    "Nothing much.  These woods.  A couple of private estates.
There's a posh private academy up the road a little - some sort
of research institute now.  Used to be an exclusive prep school. 
Beyond that there's some residential land - that's where Mike
Keenan lived - and then the town.  Salem Center's a good place. 
Not much crime.  People keep to themselves.  Not much trouble,
unless a few kids get drunk on a Saturday night."
    "So what was Mike Keenan doing alone in the woods?"
    "Taking a short cut home from school."
    "After dark?  On a bicycle?"
    "He knew the area pretty well.  Lived here all his life. 
He'd been studying late at the library."  There was an awkward
pause.  As if someone had said something, the sheriff added
firmly, "He was a good kid."
    Mulder and Scully glanced at each other.  They hadn't doubted
it.
 
    The morgue was tiny, smelling too strongly of disinfectant. 
The lighting was bad.  The body on the table was touching in its
youth.  Whatever had burned the foliage around the stream had not
damaged the skin, except for an ugly burn on the arm.  The boy
might have been asleep.  Tousled brown hair, matted now, framed a
face neither beautiful nor ugly.  Just a kid of thirteen, like
many others.  Even in death he had the gawky look of someone in a
growth spurt.
    "Whatever burned the foliage didn't cause the death," said
the Sheriff.  "Least, we don't think so.  He didn't drown, though
he was alive in the water for at least fifteen minutes all
together.  It appears he had some sort of metabolic seizure. 
Electromagnetic spasm.  We don't know what caused it."
    "Heart attack?" suggested Mulder.
    "In a thirteen year old?  With a healthy history?  Not
likely."
    "He could have died of fear."
    "Fear of what?"
    "Whatever - whoever - burned the area.  Must have used a
flame-thrower.  We think it drove him into the water."
    "If that's the case, it's murder as much as if he was shot
through the heart."  He sighed, shaking his head.
    "Leaving no trace?" said Scully sceptically.  "Perhaps he was
hallucinating.  On drugs."
    "So what left the burned circle?"  The Sheriff shook his head
regretfully.  "I can't believe it.  I knew him.... He used to
play baseball with my Archie.  Whatever was going on, he didn't
deserve this."  He looked reluctant to approach the body.  "You
haven't seen the strange part yet."
    "Which is?"
    "Let me show you...."  With the stoicism of a man in battle,
he lifted the boy's arm.  On the back of his elbow was a series
of small dermal extensions, tiny spikes growing in a line with a
tiny membrane between them.
    "It's on the other arm too, just the same," said the Sheriff. 
"And look at this."
    He turned the body over on its chest.  The bare back,
uncovered by the sheet, had small protrusions from each
shoulder-blade.  They were like wings.  Ribbed, delicate,
prickly....
    "Looks like the trout I had for supper," said Mulder lightly.
    The Sheriff scowled.  Scully went to get a lab coat.  She
understood the 
Sheriff's disapproval, but Mulder was right.
 
    Hours later, after Scully had done a thorough medical
examination, after they had talked to the grieving parents and
the grieving little sister, they had learned only what the police
reports already said.  Mike was a bright, normal boy who had
started to change about six months ago.  His marks had fallen
from A's to C's.  He had started to grow, and lost his appetite. 
He had dropped off the sports teams he had been part of.  He
became withdrawn and secretive, keeping to his room or the school
library.
    Drugs seemed a likely explanation, but the body betrayed no
hint of drug use.  His friends thought it unlikely.  There was no
sign of delinquency.  Just an anti-social reclusiveness.  Growing
paranoia.
    His little sister summed it up.  "He became a teenager. 
Teenagers are weird."
 
    Scully went to interview more school friends.  Mulder went to
the pub to get a feel for local colour, and ask a few questions.
    Joey Porecci had been Mike's best friend when they were
twelve. "He got real strange," said Joey. "Didn't want to talk to
me any more.  Didn't want to hang out.  Like he thought I might
hurt him or something."
    "Drugs?"
    "The cops asked that too.  Well, I guess you're a sort of
cop.  He always said he'd never do drugs.  Something messed him
up, though."
    Scully looked around Joey's room.  There was a baseball
pennant, a poster picture of the Incredible Hulk, a rather
touching picture in a frame of Joey and Mike holding up a large
bass one of them had caught.  Mike looked young and happy.  He
was wearing a bathing suit.  His bare arms looked like the bare
arms of any young boy.  There was no sign of unusual growth.
    Scully asked, "Was there anything physically unusual about
Mike?"
    "You mean like, besides dying?"
    "Yeah."
    Joey thought. "No.  He was sick sometimes, but no more than
anybody else.  He ran fast.  He was a great swimmer.  Everybody
thought he'd be an athlete, till he just... stopped."
    "Was his skin normal?"
    "Sure, I guess.  He got freckles every summer.  Is that
normal?"
    "I think so."  Scully smiled. "You go to Salem Centre High
School, don't you?  What's it like?"
    "Okay, I guess."  They chatted about the school: teachers who
were popular, who knew Mike, teacher who were (on good authority)
cruddy.  They talked about what it was like to live in the
neighbourhood.  The word "okay" got used a lot.  They talked
about the people Mike hung out with, which was nobody, over the
past few months, as far as Joey knew.  Before, it had been Joey
and Matteo and Adam.
    "Are there any other high schools around here?"
    "No.  I don't think so.  There's a private school up
Graymalkin Lane, but it's like a college or something now.  A
research place.  Some kids say it's haunted."
    "Haunted?"
    "Yeah. I don't believe in that stuff, though."
    "What kind of haunted?"
    "I dunno.  I mean, they still use the place and all, so why
would ghosts hang around there? They say strange things happen
though.  Werewolves.  Voodoo.  UFO's."
    "Sounds like a TV show."
    "Yeah.  It's just stories."
 
    At Harry's Hideaway, the local pub, Mulder sat with a beer
surveying the locals.  There weren't many on a weekday night. 
There was a middle-aged couple, a few solitary men, one
darts-player and a sulky girl, who might or might not be the town
whore.  She ignored Mulder.
    Mulder was considering a game of darts when someone else
walked in.  A short man of indeterminate age - not young - came
in and went to a barstool as if he owned it.  The bartender gave
him a nod.  Without exchanging words, he put a brew on the
counter and took the short man's money.  
    His hair was dark and swept up at the sides.  He popped open
the can and took a large drink, tilting his head back as he did
so.  He wiped his mouth with the back of his hand.  He wore a
black and red plaid jacket, the kind lumberjacks wear.  His hands
seemed large for his size.
    Mulder got up.  He walked casually over, put his beer on the
counter, and sat beside the man.  "Nice night," he said.  He was
ignored.
    "Buy you a beer?" he offered.
    Dark, hostile eyes turned to him.  "Yer tryin' ta pick me up,
yer wastin' yer time, bub."  There was a regional accent, but
Mulder couldn't place it.
    Mulder sighed.  Misjudged again.  He flashed his FBI badge. 
"My name is Agent Mulder, FBI.  I'd like to ask you a few
questions."
    "So. Ask."  He drank again, more slowly this time.  Mulder
signalled the 
bartender for another drink for each of them.
    "What's your name?"
    "Wolverine."
    "You live here long?"
    "Don't live here at all.  I'm visitin' friends."
    "So where do you live?"
    "Madripoor."  Mulder had a vague memory of an obscure Asiatic
island city that seldom made the news.  He'd come across it on
some smuggling case - or had it been piracy?  Drug running? 
Something unhealthy.
    "Were you born there?" he asked, intrigued.  The man didn't
look Asian.
    "No.  I'm from Canada."  He looked straight at Mulder for the
first time.  "Am I suspected o' somethin'?"  His straight gaze
made Mulder feel unaccountably uncomfortable.
    "I'm looking for background from the locals on a case
involving a dead boy.  Who knows who, that sort of thing."
    "Sorry.  I'm an outsider.  Ask a native."
    "I'll do that.  Who are you visiting?"
    "Charles Xavier."
    Xavier.  The name was on the map.  Yes: the research
institute just outside of town.  The Xavier Institute.  The
Xavier Institute for Higher Learning.  
    This man didn't look like someone whose friends would be
academics.
    "Where'd you meet him?"  Mulder hoped the phrasing sounded
more friendly than insulting.
    "What's that got to do with a dead boy?" challenged the man
who called himself Wolverine.  (Surname?  First name?  Alias?) 
Mulder was trying to think of an answer when someone else walked
into the pub and every coherent thought flew out of his head.
    Whoever she was, she was stunning.
    She was tall, and she moved with the careless grace of a
model.  She was an exotic beauty such as you might see jetsetting
from Paris to Zimbabwe, or on the cover of Vogue.  Her hair was
white, almost silver.  It flowed down her back.  Her skin was
dark mahogany.  Her leather jacket and pants fit like a second
layer of skin.  Her boots reached her knees and the effect was of
breathtaking femininity.
    Her large, expressive eyes had long dark lashes and no
visible pupils.  Mulder blinked.  The last time he'd seen eyes
like that, he was looking at Little Orphan Annie on the funnies
page.
    She was coming towards him.  Every man in the room was
looking at her, even the bartender.  Mulder thought for one happy
moment that she was going to speak to him, but realized that he
was wrong.  She was going straight to Wolverine.  She put a hand
on his shoulder, moving close to him to say something in a voice
so low that Mulder couldn't hear it.  Damn!
    Wolverine nodded, and said to Mulder, "If that's all ya need,
Agent Mulder, I'll be on my way."
    "Sure.  Thanks," said Mulder.  Wolverine didn't introduce the
woman.  She gave Mulder a vague and uninterested smile, turning
away from him.  Wolverine put his arm lightly around her waist as
they walked out together.
    There wasn't a man in the room who wasn't envying Wolverine. 
Including Mulder.
 
    In Scully's hotel room, Mulder stretched out on the bed with
the map, letting Scully do the keywork with the laptop, at her
writing desk.  She was logged into the FBI medical files, hoping
for the best. "There are no records of humans growing fin-like
extrusions on their back and arms," she said.  "The growth was
natural, not grafted.  There are abnormalities in the boy's lungs
and brain.  I couldn't tell what they meant... His DNA is strange
too.  They tested some blood samples and checked out the parents
too.  The Keenans are physically absolutely normal.  Except for
Mike."
    "Uh-huh," said Mulder.  He found Graymalkin Lane on the map. 
The Xavier Institute for Higher Learning was some way along it,
set back from the road.  It looked large.  He squinted to make
out the fine print.  It said, "The Xavier Estate".  Behind the
building, still part of the Estate, was a sizable woods and a
lake.  Breakstone Lake.
    "I sent some blood samples for genetic testing in Washington. 
It's something that needs expert work, and some specialized
equipment."
    "You think someone might have meddled with his DNA?"
    "Who?  How?  Dr. Mengele doesn't live in New York State. 
Mike never went missing or anything - not till the day he was
killed.  He stayed in his room or in the school library."
    "Not associating with anybody."
    "No.  He dropped off the baseball team, the basketball team -
even the 
swimming team, which had been his favourite.  His room was full
of trophies.  He was good.  He'd loved it."
    "Maybe he discovered girls."
    "Uh-uh.  Didn't date.  Some of his friends thought he was
scared of something, but they didn't know what or why.  There was
a teacher tried to draw him out but all he'd say was that he
didn't want to talk about it.
    "The only odd thing that has any connection with anything is
that there's part of the woods supposed to be haunted.  None of
the kids would admit to believing it but they'd all heard
stories.  Noises in the night, explosions, flying creatures -
lights - but nothing concrete."
    "UFO's?"
    "Mul-der."
    "Just asking."
    "There wasn't much agreement about what they saw, or what
their friends told them they'd seen.  Nothing concrete to it."
    "Where is this patch of woods?"
    "North of where Mike died.  There isn't much in that area. 
It's some private land, over towards the college on Graymalkin
Lane."
    "College?  You mean the Xavier Institute?"
    "Yes."
    "Look it up.  The Xavier Institute for Higher Learning."
    She typed. "You think it might be significant?"
    "There isn't much else around here."
    "It's just a school, Mulder.  Not some hush-hush lab for
genetic experimentation.  It used to be some sort of private
school for Gifted Youngsters.... Okay, I've got a listing.  The
Xavier Institute.... 1407 Graymalkin Lane.  555-9636.  The Xavier
School for Gifted Youngsters relocated to Massachusetts.  It's a
research institute specializing in...."
    "Scully?"  Mulder had been thinking with his eyes closed. He
opened them. "What?"
    "Genetic research."
    "Go on."
    "I'll try a prospectus.... Nope, nothing."  She typed again,
waited, typed again.  "I'll check on the school.... Ah-hah!  Got
it.  This is from a few years ago.  'An academy of high standard
for the gifted child whose special talents set him apart from his
peers.  Personal training, encouragement and specialized
teaching...' blah, blah.  What else do you want to know?"
    "Principal's name."
    "Headmaster - Professor Charles Xavier."
    "Teachers?"
    "Not listed."
    "Number of students?"
    "Not listed."
    "Alumni?"
    "Not listed."
    "I sense a pattern.  What else *does* it say?"
    "Nothing.  It's just an ad.  It implies that if you need to
ask the cost of tuition, you can't afford it.  No, wait.  It
says, 'Scholarships available for the gifted student whose needs
are special but whose means are few.'  I wonder who provides the
money for that?"
    "The grateful and wealthy alumni?  Xavier himself?"
    "He must be rich.  He owns a lot of land around here.  The
Xavier Estate, they call it."
    "Look him up."
    Changes of screen; Scully read, rapt.  "Well?" asked Mulder.
    "I'm reading his bibliography."
    "Well?"
    "The man has a huge publication history.  'Genetic matrix of
equus under subglacial conditions in the Pliocene age.'  Or:
'Variant genus of Colii colii', 'Spectroscopy use in analysis of
mutagenic signatures', 'Analysis of the viral mechanisms of
sample 568'; 'Divergent chromosomal patterns of - '"
    "Stop!"  She looked up. "Stop, stop.  I'll admit that last
one is a real knee-slapper, but did he write anything where I
might understand the title?"
    "'Infrared analysis of a yellow giant in the region of Alpha
Pegasi.'"
    "How's that again?"
    "That was from the Journal of Optical Astronomy.  He was
nominated for an award for that, but turned it down."
    "Why?"
    "It doesn't say.  It just says 'refused'.  Possibly because
it isn't his field."
    "Right," said Mulder.  "He usually publishes on genetics. 
That paper was on astrophysics."
    "You did understand the titles."
    "I was reading them just the other day on the subway.  So
Xavier is 
well-rounded.  Anything else there?"
    "He has several advanced degrees... and has published papers
co-written by a Dr. Moira MacTaggert of the Muir Island Research
Institute, Scotland.  And a Dr. Henry McCoy of.... the Xavier
Institute."
    "The topics?"
    "Biophysics.  Genetics.  Radio astronomy.  Spatial topology
of gravitational fluxes.... Most of them are on genetics.  Pretty
advanced stuff."
    Mulder remembered a room full of tanks, with bodies in them. 
"Genetic 
engineering?" he hazarded. "Fish boys?"
    "You're reaching, Mulder.  Not one of these articles so much
as mentions a fish boy.  Or even a fish."  She turned from the
screen with a flourish.  "He's a highly respected scientist in an
extremely specialized field and we don't have anything connecting
him with that boy's murder."
    "We have anomalies in the boy's DNA.  We have the
geographical connection."
    "Mike never even went to his school.  Besides, Xavier
couldn't kill anyone in the woods.  He couldn't even get there. 
He's a paraplegic, confined to a wheelchair."
    "Stephen Hawkings, only less famous."
    "Stephen Hawkings, if we're comparing IQ's."
    "Family?"
    "Nothing mentions family here."  She turned back to the
screen.  "Except for his writings, there's not much about him at
all.  He seems to avoid the limelight."
    "So?  What about his graduates?  If he ran a school, there
must be graduates."
    It took her a while this time.  Mulder closed his eyes, and
thought of a tall black woman in leather with white hair and
alien eyes.  He let his mind wander.   At last Scully said:
"Ah-hah!  I was beginning to think no one ever actually graduated
from the place.  I've found three of them.  Dr. Henry McCoy -
remember him?  The co-author?  And two others - I even have a
photo.  Scott Summers and Jean Grey."
    Mulder came over for a look, half expecting to see rough
little guy from Canada and a woman who looked like a goddess from
Kenya.  His guess was wrong.  The photo was from a newspaper; it
was a wedding announcement, a portrait of the bride and groom. 
The couple looked all-American, yuppies in a toothpaste ad, WASP
features and broad smiles.  It was a wedding picture.  The man
had red-tinted glasses, his eyes invisible behind them.  The
bride was a red-haired beauty.  "It's like a picture out of
Bridal Magazine," said Mulder.
    "Oh?  You read that often?"
    "When I'm through with the Journal of Optical Astronomy."
    "Sunglasses in his wedding portrait?"
    "And no occupation listed for either of them.  The best, the
brightest, the most beautiful," mused Mulder.  "I wonder why
these gifted youngsters are so hard to trace?  Shouldn't they be
turning up as scientists, academics, leaders, poets?"
    "Brain surgeons?  Forget it, Mulder.  It's a small student
body.  We've seen that McCoy is a scientist.  I think this is a
dead end."
    "A taste for privacy might be common sense.  Or... Try
something else.  Look up Wolverine."  He went and stretched out
on the bed again.
    "A small furred predator."
    "A guy I met in the pub.  Friend of the Professor."
    "Wolverine?"
    "Wolverine."
    "First name or last?"  She was typing.
    "I didn't get a chance to ask."
    "Sounds like an alias.  I'll see what our files have
listed.... Okay.... 
Wolverine...."  She stared silently at the screen.
    "Well?"
    "Not what I expected."
    "Criminal record?"  He was ready to bet on it.
    "No.  Come and see."
    Mulder got off the bed again and went to look at the screen. 
There was no picture, little text.  The screen said: Wolverine -
classified 4302, sec. 68337 code G.  Government of Canada
Department of National Defense Department K.  Class g-7
authorization only.  File code: Weapon X."
    "I can't get past that," said Scully.  "Not without some
high-level authorization and a few phone calls.  Is it worth it?"
    "Not yet," said Mulder thoughtfully.  "Just what is
Department K?"
    "I never heard of it.  Let me see...."  She typed some more. 
"Nope.  You need clearance for that one.  Something the Canadians
aren't making public knowledge."
    Mulder walked to the bed and back.  "So Xavier has friends
the Canadians keep in a Top Secret file. mixed up with something
called Weapon X. I wonder why."
    "I  guess they like initials the way we like numbers.  You
say this guy is a friend of Professor Xavier?"
    "So he said."
    Scully stretched.  It had been a long day. "Mulder.  You
really think all this is relevant?"
    "How should I know?  Do we have anything else?"
    "Just a boy who shouldn't be dead.  With fins on his arms."
    "I think tomorrow we should visit the Institute for Higher
Learning."
    "Agreed."  Scully logged off, turned off the computer.
    "One more question.  No, you can answer it off the top of
your head.  What condition causes a person to have eyeballs with
no pupils and no iris?"
    "In layman's terms?"
    "So I can understand."
    "It's called blindness."
    "No, this woman can see fine.  She looked at me."
    "Then she has pupils.  She couldn't see otherwise.  Mulder,
don't you ever get tired?"
    He took the hint, and went to his room.
 
- End  of part 1 -

--
Namaste,
Elizabeth

-- ab248@FreeNet.Carleton.ca -- Ottawa, Canada --


From math.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!chi-news.cic.net!nntp.coast.net!torn!nott!cunews!freenet-news.carleton.ca!FreeNet.Carleton.CA!ab248 Mon Jul  1 10:38:50 1996
Article: 20773 of alt.tv.x-files.creative
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From: ab248@FreeNet.Carleton.CA (Elizabeth Holden)
Newsgroups: alt.tv.x-files.creative
Subject: Sentinels (Part 2 of 3)
Date: 1 Jul 1996 13:54:13 GMT
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This is Part 2 of "Sentinels".  There are 3 parts in all.
 
Disclaimer:  SENTINELS is a crossover story based on the TV show
X-Files and the Marvel mutant comics X-Men, The Uncanny X-Men,
Generation X and X-Force.  So all the X-Files characters (Mulder,
Scully, Skinner, the Smoking Man) are copyright Chris Carter and
Ten Thirteen Productions, while all the X-Men Characters (Charles
Xavier, Wolverine, Storm, Cyclops, Phoenix, and so on) are
copyright Marvel Comics Group and/or Marvel Entertainment Group.
No infringement on any copyright is intended, and this is done for
no profit to myself except my own pleasure and amusement.
 
The alert reader will notice that I have taken some liberties with
the Marvel Universe in order to make it mesh with the world of X-
Files.  That was part of the fun.
 
This is the first time I have posted a story, and I'd love to hear
feedback.  You can e-mail me at ab248@FreeNet.Carleton.Ca.
 
* * *
 
SENTINELS
An X-Files/X-Men Crossover by Elizabeth Holden
 
Part 2 of 3
 
The Xavier Institute for Higher Learning, Westchester Country, New
York.  October 13.
 
    The morning was crisp and clear, so the leaves rattled on the
ground as they walked towards the large front doors of the Xavier
Institute for Higher Learning.  It was an imposing building of
red brick enhanced with timber.  There was no ivy on the walls. 
It appeared to have a disconcerting combination of clean newness
and venerability.  "You feel more educated just looking at it,"
said Mulder.
    Scully looked over the playing field.  "I wonder where
everyone is?"
    As she spoke, two girls came out of one of the doors, books
in their arms.  One was blonde, the other dark.  One said
something, and the other laughed.  They went indoors again.
    "It doesn't look very spooky," said Scully.  "We might be
wasting our time here."  Mulder rang the doorbell before she
could stop him.
    It was answered quickly by a tall, handsome man with red
sunglasses.  Scott Summers said, "Agent Mulder?  Wolverine told
us you might be dropping by.  Come in."
    Mulder entered, and introduced Scully.  Summers' handshake
was polite and firm.  "You want to talk to Professor Xavier, I
imagine," he said. "I don't know if we can help your
investigation.   We will do what we can."
    They walked through a foyer of old, polished wood and a large
staircase.  To the right was a room of indeterminate purpose, and
a closed, polished wooden door.  Summers tapped.  Scully looked
at the bust on the table, of a bald man with a serious look. 
There was no name attached.
    If there had been an answer to Summers' knock, they did not
hear it, but 
Summers opened the door and held it for them.  They entered.
    Bald, unsmiling, unmoving, Charles Xavier's personality could
be felt before he even spoke.  It was the face of the bust
outside: arched eyebrows, awareness in his eyes.   He nodded to
them. "Agent Scully. Agent Mulder.  Welcome to the Xavier
Institute.  I understand you are investigating the murder of Mike
Keenan?"
     "Yes, Professor Xavier," said Scully.  "There are some
unusual aspects to his death that we are looking into.  Did you
know the boy?"
     Summers stood casually behind Xavier's chair.  It was not a
wheelchair, strictly speaking, since it had no wheels.  It seemed
to be some sort of a hover apparatus.  It covered his knees.
     Behind the Professor, there were pictures of former students
on the walls.  Scott Summers appeared, always in dark glasses, or
with an oddly shaped visor.  Although nothing else about the
school had indicated a Christian slant, one young man was in
angel costume, complete with large wings.  There was a young,
fair girl with horns, indicating perhaps that theatricals had
been a staple of the curriculum.   He looked casually over them
until he saw the people he was looking for, in one group photo,
and then separately: the white-haired black woman, and Wolverine.
     "Please sit down.  No, I never met him, or, as far as I
know, his family.  It is a terrible thing for a child to die
violently, suddenly.... alone...."  His sorrow - his anger -
seemed genuine.  It was easy to imagine students turning to this
man for help and guidance.  In many ways, he was the classical
image of a teacher.  This might explain, thought Mulder, why
Summers seemed protective, with the FBI asking questions of his
former teacher - his employer now, it seemed - regarding a murder
case with unpleasant implications.  He tried to imagine himself
feeling similar concern for some of the hardened men who had
taught him at the Academy, or for Skinner.  He failed.
     "Have you known of any unusual happenings in the area?"
asked Mulder.
     Xavier considered.  "The murder occurred between here and
Salem Center, did it not?"
     "It seems Mike was on his way home from school," said
Scully.
     "Any strangers in the area lately?  Who is resident now at
this Institute?" asked Mulder.
     "Myself.  My colleague, Dr. Henry McCoy, and our associates. 
Currently there are a larger number of people resident than
usual, as the students from the Massachusetts Academy which I run
are here temporarily.  There are renovations being done to the
Massachusetts building."
     "How many people, in total?"
     "Between thirty and forty at any given time."
     "Might one of them have heard or seen something unusual?"
     "I will make inquiries."
     "Is Wolverine one of your associates?"
     "A friend."
     "Since we are here," asked Scully, "Might we have a tour of
the school?"
     "Of course.  Scott?"
     "We'd be happy to show you around," said Summers.  He held
the door and they went out, Xavier following.  His wheelless
chair was almost silent.
     They followed, listening to Summers and Xavier by turns
describing the school.  The building itself had been erected in
1698, thought rebuilt several times since then, without losing
the charm of the original architecture.  The school sounded
respectable and dull.  The student body was small, so that each
students' needs were individually met.  It was implied, but not
stated aloud, that even the poorest of students was able to
achieve straight A's here.
     There were study rooms, but, since the school's function had
given way to that of the research institute, no classrooms.  One
room on the ground floor was set up with some amazing
electronics.  The labs, gym and equipment rooms were in a level
below ground; Summers took them there readily enough, in a smooth
elevator that left them both disoriented.  There was a large
gymnasium; an amazingly luxurious swimming pool.  "All that
parental expenditure?" murmured Mulder.  Scully gave him a look. 
 
     Before one of the doors was a tall young man in purple,
leaning against the wall.  His high, buckled boots were gold and
reached to the thigh.  His hair was strawberry blond, tied in a
waist-long pony-tail.  He had a star painted - or tattooed -
around his right eye.  His arms were crossed on his chest. 
Crossed on his back were two long swords, the hilts polished to
glittering.  His face was expressionless, inimical.  Xavier
nodded to him, but did not speak or make introductions.  His cold
eyes followed them onto the elevator.  He combined a stunning
physical beauty and a silent, threatening hostility.
     "MTV star," muttered Mulder, so only Scully could hear.
     "Palace eunuch," she replied.
     On the second floor were the private rooms - plenty to go
around, it seemed.  Windows overlooked the grounds.  Scully
paused to admire the view.  The forest was in full colour, the
best of autumn spreading itself before them.
     "Is that where Mike Keenan died?" asked Mulder.
     "Precisely," said Xavier.  Scully again had the impression
that there was more to his tone than regret at the murder of a
young stranger, some sort of personal stake.  Was he hiding
something?  Mulder said, "The local kids have stories about
hauntings and mysterious lights after dark in this area.  Do you
know anything about that?"
     "I thought all youngsters liked the mysterious."
     "Any foundation in it?"
     Xavier smiled.  "We work in genetic theory, Agent Mulder. 
My students probably know more about ghosts than I do."  As
Mulder asked Xavier about the path through the woods, Scully
turned to look out another of the windows, and realized they were
not alone.
     The blonde girl she had seen carrying books was standing
there, watching them from the doorway.  She smiled shily.  "Hi,"
said Scully, going over to her.
     "Hi."  The girl looked a little more at ease.  In jeans and
T-shirt, she looked like any American teenager, prettier than
some, more composed than many.  "Paige Guthrie."  Scully said her
name and they shook hands.  "Are you really an FBI agent?"
     "Yes."
     "How'd you get the job?"
     "First I became a doctor."
     "Oh, wow.  A doctor and an FBI agent.  I'd like to be just
one of those things."
     To most kids, Scully said it was a lot of hard work, or that
it took years of study.  Looking at Paige Guthrie's animated
face, she felt the echo of Mulder's words: the best and the
brightest and the most beautiful.  This girl could be anything
she wanted, in any combination, if she worked hard enough for it. 
"It's a great job," confessed Scully.  When they aren't trying to
kill you or lie to you.  "Do you like being at this school?"
     "Oh, yes.  Well, actually, we're usually at the school in
Massachusetts.  It's nicer.  We're just here for a while.  But I
can't imagine a better school for us.  You're investigating that
boy in town, aren't you?  The one who was killed?"
     "Mike Keenan.  Yes.  Did you ever meet him?"
     "No.  We don't get much chance to meet the local kids. 
We're mostly too busy.  Sometimes at the mall or something....
But no, I never met him."
     The honesty of it was enough to make Scully turn towards
Mulder.  We're wasting our time, she thought: there's nothing
here that will help us find out why a boy had fins.  But as she
turned she saw something through the window that made her thought
disappear.
     In the distance, past the playing field, someone was running
towards the woods.  At first she thought it was a small boy. 
But.... no.  It was a figure such as she had glimpsed before, in
the old mine complex in West Virginia, running.  Hairless. 
Small.  Large-eyed.  Green.   The memory was still unreal, but
vivid, like a dream she could not shake.  She blinked, but the
figure was still there, running, and it disappeared into the
trees.
     Paige was following her gaze.  "What was that?"  Scully
asked.  At the other side of the room, Xavier was telling Mulder
about the genetic studies the institute was undertaking.  Long
words strung in combination perhaps accounted for the politely
patient expression on Mulder's face.
     "What?" asked Paige.  Her tone was polite, but not open. 
She knew what Scully had seen.
     "I saw the strangest person running into the woods."
     "Strange?  You shouldn't judge by appearances, Agent
Scully," said Paige firmly.  "Some people might think you look
strange.  That was Leech.  He's a sweet kid.  Bright, too.  He
has some sort of skin condition that makes him look funny."
     "What condition?"
     "How should I know?  Ask Professor Xavier.  I don't like
putting labels on people.  Labels are odious."
     Scully shook her head. "No, I'm sorry. I meant no offense. 
I have a professional interest.  I am a doctor."
     "And I'm late for class.  It's been great to meet you, Dr.
Scully."  She ran down the stairs.
     Mulder said, "What was that all about?"
     "I'm not sure.  I thought I saw one of your little green
men."
     Xavier took them back to the main hallway.  They shook
hands.  He assured them that he would offer any assistance
possible, they need only call.
     They walked toward the road. "Little green man?" repeated
Mulder. "Where?"
     "Running into the woods.  Paige - the girl - said it was a
boy named Leech who has a... condition.  What were his eyes
like?"
     "Large.  I only saw him from a distance, but they were...
set further back in his head than normal, and large."
     "So?  Is there a skin condition that would make him look
like that?"
     "How should I know?  Let me examine him, maybe I could tell
you."
     "Hey, Scully, it's okay...."
     "Is it.  That place is weird, Mulder.  They tried to act
like some preppy version of Welcome Back Kotter but it didn't
work.  The place is rich, modern, well equipped - but for a place
that must have upwards of forty people in it, where are they?  We
didn't see either the researchers or the students - "
     "They were working.  Or in class."
     "Or the teacher, or the half-dozen adults, or servants to
keep up the place and the grounds.  It's immaculate, Mulder.  Can
a man in a wheelchair do that alone?"
     "Hover-chair."
     "What?"
     "There were no wheels on the thing."
     "The Professor was abstracted - "
     "I'm sure Hawkings has plenty of distractions too."
     "And did you notice the cameras? Lenses in the walls?  The
place has incredible security."
     "They're the paranoid rich."
     "There are strange controls in the elevator and electronic
detection devices on the roof."
     "You sure that isn't satellite TV?  Anyway, we saw the guy
with the swords."
     "Right.  He fit your idea of the typical genetic scientist? 
He might have stepped out of the World Wrestling Federation. 
What was he guarding in that room, anyway?"
     "He wasn't.  He was just hanging around.  Like students do. 
You know, Joe Cool.  The Joe Cools are into bodybuilding these
days."
     "You think they aren't hiding something?"
     "I don't know, Scully, but it seems the worst we have is two
people with dye disease and one with a skin condition.  If Xavier
takes in intelligent handicapped kids, it doesn't make him a
murderer.  It makes him a Mother Theresa!"
     "Let's look at the site again," said Scully.  She looked
back at the Institute.  Storm clouds were gathered above it, and
the wind had picked up.
 
     At the site, they sat on a log and reviewed what they knew
about the fish boy and his death.  It seemed very little.  "I
should have asked Paige if she'd heard anything about hauntings,"
said Scully.
     "Did you hear that?"
     "What?"
     "I thought I heard a wolf howl."
     They listened.
     "I did hear a wolf howl."
     "I don't think so, Mulder.  In daylight?  Here?"
     Over the trees, a Blackbird jet rose, flew over them and
disappeared.
     "That was a Blackbird," said Mulder.
     "From the Institute."
     "Are you sure?"
     "It was from that direction, that distance.... I think."
     "Well provided."
     "Or with friends in high places."
     "In the Canadian government?"
     "The Canadian government doesn't have a plane like that."
     "Let's go back to the school," said Mulder.  "I think I left
my hat behind."
     
     "Can we justify this?" asked Scully, as Mulder tapped on the
door.
     "I thought you were the one who was sure they weren't
kosher."
     "Can't prove it," she said, shivering.
     It was not Summers who answered the door, but the short,
dark man with flying hair that Mulder had met in the pub.  He
could be no one else.  "We're busy," he said.
     "Just a few minutes of your time," said Mulder.  His foot
was firmly in the doorway. "I want to ask you about Weapon X."
     Whatever Wolverine was about to do or say, he changed his
mind.  Sighing, he held open the door.  "Agent Scully," he said. 
"Come in.  Sit down.  Make yerself comfortable.  Coffee?"
     "Thanks," said Mulder, at the same time Scully said, "No,
thanks."  They glanced at each other.
     Wolverine led them into a sitting room.  He poured two cups
of coffee, sat with an ankle propped on the opposite knee, and
said, "Weapon X is ancient history.  What do you want to hear?"
     "What does Weapon X have to do with you?  And what does it
have to do with the death of Mike Keenan?
     "Nothin' to do with Mike.  It was a project set up by the
Canadian government.  They had me workin' on it, once.  Long time
ago."  He pronounced Canadian "Canajan".
     "What was Weapon X?"
     "Can't talk about it."
     "Even now?"
     "Not now, not ever."
     "Does that mean it's an ongoing project?"
     "I wouldn't know.  Let that job years ago."
     "Does it involve long-distance laser weaponry?" asked
Scully.
     "What is this, twenty questions?  Sorry, darlin', but I've
nothin' to add."
     "Suppose we get clearance from the Prime Minister?"
     "Then ask him about Weapon X.  I don't work for them no
more."
     "And who do you work for?" asked Mulder softly.
     Wolverine said, equally softly, "Myself."  His deep voice
gained in timbre as he spoke.  "And I work for all the Mike
Keenans of the world, who don't know what's happenin' to them or
why, but they know it's a tough world and they don't know how to
fight back or who to ask fer help.  I work for the sake of kids
who wouldn't get a chance otherwise, and who don't have much of a
chance anyway, but they're goin' to get every scrap of help we
can give them."
     "We?"
     "Me.  My friends."
     "Xavier."
     "And others."
     "You didn't know Mike Keenan."
     "I don't need to.  I read about him in the papers - after it
happened.  I've known him too often... in 'Nam, in the ghetto, in
Madripoor, in places where they tie you to the stake and burn you
for being what he was."
     "And what we he?" asked Scully.
     "A victim.  An' that's bad.  Kids should have a chance to be
more'n victims."  He paused. "I'm bein' called.  Stay here."
     He walked out of the room.
     "Called?" repeated Scully.  She had heard nothing.
     "What brought that on?" asked Mulder.  "Suddenly he's a
preacher."
     "He needs to talk," said Scully.
     "I couldn't get a word out of him in the pub."
     "Wrong time, wrong place."
     "Are we staying here?  You go right, I'll go left.  Watch
out for cameras."
     "And men with swords," replied Scully.
     "Meet here in fifteen minutes.  If I'm not here, back at the
car.  Got it?"  He was gone.
     Scully, mentally shrugging, went down the right-hand
corridor.  She wondered what Wolverine knew, or thought he knew,
about the Keenan boy.  She thought she heard voices, and
shouting, but when she stopped to listen, she heard nothing. 
Well, kids can be noisy.... If there were kids here.
     She was near the elevator.  Nothing ventured, nothing
gained.  She could always claim to have been lost.  She pushed a
button at random, and the doors closed.  There was a stomach-
churning second, and the doors opened on another level.  She
hadn't seen this corridor before.
     She tried the door opposite her.  It was not locked.  She
opened it, and stepped in.
     It was no empty.  There was a blue gorilla perched on the
back of a chair, peering at a computer screen as he tapped keys
at top speed.
     The gorilla was wearing a lab coat.
     No, not a gorilla: it was too small, but much larger than a
chimp.  It wore tiny glasses perched on its blue nose.  She saw,
as it turned to her, smiling, that its large hairy bent knees
were blue and furry as well.  Under the lab coat, it wore black
shorts with a belt.  The belt buckle was designed as the X-
pattern that was emblematic of Xavier's Institute.
     Without warning, it somersaulted over her head, and landed
between her and the door. "Dr. Scully, I presume?"  
     "Who are you?" blurted Scully.
     "Dr, Henry McCoy."  He extended a paw - a hand - and Scully
hesitantly shook it.  It was warm, and felt comfortingly human.
"You may, if you will, call me Hank.  I wanted to discuss some
details of Mike Keenan's condition with you."
     "You know about - "
     "Only in general terms.  I might have made some progress, if
the boy had come to us, but he was killed before we could
approach him.  You have, I believe, had the opportunity to
actually examine his body.  I was curious about his skeletal
conformation.  Here, here, sit...."  He held a chair by the
computer console for her.  She sat, gingerly.  She was doing her
best not to stare at his hairy blue chest and the knees that were
like pom-poms.  He called up a programme on the screen.  "You
know his lungs were full of water?"
     "Yes.  Drowning was not, however, the cause of death."
     "No. He could breathe quite well under water."  Images of
blood cells appeared on the screen, and enlarged.  Scully had
seldom seen such precision in a monitor.  The machines were
unlike anything she had ever seen.  So was the notation on some
of the unfamiliar console keys.  "Did you get the opportunity for
a genetic analysis?"
     "I sent cell samples to the lab.  I don't have results yet."
     "Had you noticed anything odd?"
     "Yes.  Who are you?  A colleague of Xavier?"
     "A colleague, student and friend.  Look," said McCoy,
highlighting a section of screen. "This is very interesting: some
of his cells have spontaneously altered so he could breathe in
either a normal air situation or under water.  He had become a
natural amphibian."
     Scully was watching McCoy, not the screen.  "How do you know
this?"
     "I examined a blood sample, which is what you see here."
     "When he was alive?"
     "No.  I confess, Agent Scully.... Dana? ... I took a blood
sample shortly after death occurred.  We found him.... too late."
     "It was you who phoned the police?"
     "Let's just say it was me or a friend."
     "Why make it anonymous?" 
     He leaned back in the chair, his hands clasped behind his
head, glasses twirling in one extended finger.  He propped his
feet against the edge of the keyboard.  His toes were remarkable. 
"Because when you look like I do, you find it more convenient to
avoid the constabulary.  I would no more kill a boy like that
than you would, but would the local police believe me?  Knowing
me to have been examining the site shortly after the boy's death? 
 Would a jury believe me, do you think?"
     "I'm not sure I do," said Scully.  "You seem articulate.  So
explain.  How did you come to be at the murder site right after
the murder?  How did you know about it?"
     "We were trying to find him.  Trying to save him.  We got
there... too late."
     "Who?"
     "Myself and my friends."
     "Xavier?  Summers?  Wolverine?"
     "I had really hoped, Doctor, to discuss the medical
predicament of the deceased rather than the discovery of the
body."
     "Think of me as FBI first, doctor second," said Scully.
     "I am, as you perhaps realize, a geneticist," said McCoy.
     "Co-author of "Spectroscopy use in analysis of mutagenic
signatures'."
     "Among other things.... You've read it?"
     "No," said Scully regretfully.
     "A pity.  I'd like to know your thoughts on my speculation
about the electromagnetic discharge of -- No.  Well.  All right,
then.  Let me tell you about Keenan's genetic makeup."  He
switched the picture on the screen.  "You are waiting to hear
from your lab?"
     "Yes."
     "They should look at the formation of the blood platelets,
here.  You see the anomalous compound structure....."
 
     Mulder found a number of locked doors.  He wandered deeper
into the mansion, cutting through the kitchen.  It was empty,
though it showed signs of use; someone had left a cutting board
and a heel of bread on the counter, with crumbs, and a baseball
cap.  He found another door beyond that, which he failed to open. 
He took a magnetic impression of the lock with his bogus Esso
credit card.  Give time, he could get in.  He went through an
open door, which led to a library.  High shelves of books, row
upon row.  A glance at the nearest shelf revealed science texts
in German.  Someone had left a Heinlein novel open on a low
table.
     A voice behind him said, "Why'd you come back?"
     He turned, and found himself facing another student.
     Paige Guthrie had fit his image of the preppy coed - blonde,
elegant, strong-minded and self-possessed.
     This kid was shorter and younger.  Her clothes - shirt,
shorts, boots in primary colours - looked like the bargain table
at K-mart. She was maybe thirteen or fourteen, Asian-American,
with an androgynous look that would soon transform into beauty. 
There were blue plastic sunglasses pushed up on her head, but her
eyes, he was relieved to see, looked normal.
     "There were unanswered questions," he said.  She clearly
knew who he was, but he showed her his badge anyway.  "Agent
Mulder.  FBI."
     "Yeah.  Fox Mulder.  What kind of name is Fox?  I'm Jubilee. 
I know you're just doing your job but you'll do it better if you
go after someone else."
     "You're a student here?"
     "I'm a friend of Logan.
     "Who?"
     "Wolvie.  Wolverine!"
     "Why is your elevator there locked?"
     "The what?"
     "Elevator."
     "Geez.  They lock it when we're not using it.  THat bother
you?"  Mulder shook his head. "If the White Queen was here she'd
been pissed. Old Frost-bite. She'd eat you alive and suck on your
bones.  She doesn't like government snoops."  It sounded like
more than a vague boast that he'd get it when the teacher came
back.  He had come across high school teachers, in the past, who
were witches.  The White Queen?
     "No one does," he said.  "My job doesn't endear me to
everyone, but sometimes you have to find the truth."
     "Truth?  I'll tell you about the truth, Agent Fox Mulder. 
Truth is you're lost.  You don't know what's goin' on or why and
you're looking at us 'cause maybe we seem strange and this isn't
like most other places.  You can't even tell the good guys from
the bad guys and you don't know where to start.  The X-Men are
busting their ass to destroy the Sentinels and you're back at the
starting gate wondering why a high school kid had fins."
     "Why did he have fins?"
     "He ordered 'em from Sears.  What a stupid question."
     "Who are the X-Men?"
     "Us.  We're the X-Men.  Cyclops and Wolvie an' - "  She
paused, a strange look coming over her face.  "Oh.  Sorry," she
said in a small voice, as if talking to someone silent and
invisible.
     Mulder said, "What - " and stopped, forgetting what he was
about to say.  He felt a velvet touch in his mind.  It was
something he had felt before.  Images of Samantha floating in the
air.  Images of men beating him, and a large room full of
lights.... the sense of a place in his brain that should have
been there, but was not, and never would be again.... the sense
of a presence intruding in his thoughts, touching his memories,
being where it had no right to be.  He shouted, "No!" to the
presence in his mind, and doubled over, fighting in.  He could
see Jubilee shouting.  He heard her say, as if she was far away,
"Jeannie, stop it!  He knows you're there - he's freaking!"
     Mulder ran.  He scrambled through the kitchen and found the
front door, charging down the lane without looking behind him. 
It was getting dark.  He no longer saw the beauty of the dusky
autumn or the glow of sunset over the trees.  He saw Samantha,
and men who beat him, and the aliens.... aliens from a long time
ago.... The horror of mindwipe.  Is this what Duane Barry had
undergone from the probes of the aliens?  Or Scully?
     He leaned against the car, panting, getting a grip.
     He heard Scully shouting his name.  He did not respond.  He
squeezed his eyes shut, trying to restore something of
himself.... She put a hand on his shoulder and he flinched away. 
The sense of her words started to reach him.  She was saying,
"Mulder?  Mulder!  Are you okay?  What happened?"
     "Yeah, I'm okay," he gasped.  She took his wrist in her hand
and looked at her watch. He pulled his wrist away.  "I said I'm
okay!"
     "You're pale and sweaty and your pulse is fast.  At least
sit down."
     He took a deep breath.  "Okay."  He got into the car, behind
the wheel.  She sat in the passenger seat, shutting the door
carefully.  "No one followed you, except me.  What happened?"
     He leaned his arms on the steering wheel, closing his eyes. 
He ran his mind over the conversation with Jubilee, up to the
point of psychic entry; careful, now, work through the panic - 
     "Mulder.  Tell me about it."
     He opened his eyes.  "I met one of the kids.  A younger one,
this time... from the school in Massachusetts... Asian-American,
adolescent, attitude.  She said she knew we were just doing our
job but we'd do it better if we went after someone else.  I asked
her if she was a student and she said she was a friend of
Wolvie's."
     "Wolvie?"
     "Quote.  I asked why the elevator was locked.  She said they
weren't using it.  She said... someone... her teacher, I
think.... Would be 'pissed' if she was here, presumably with me. 
She'd eat me alive and suck on my bones.  I had the impression of
a fearsome witch.  I said that it was sometimes necessary to find
the truth.  She said...." He took another deep breath: this was
where it was getting difficult.  He could feel the holes in his
brain, like dropped stitches, like bullet-holes in a wall. 
Scully was listening intently.  "She said I was lost because I
didn't know what I was looking at."
     "True," confirmed Scully.
     "True.  She said I was looking at them because they were
strange and the Institute wasn't like other places.  She said I
couldn't tell the good guys from the bad guys, and that the...
the... her people were busting their ass to destroy the...."
     He stopped, groping for a word that wouldn't come.  Scully
wryly suggested, "Evidence?"
     "No.  It's gone.  She said we were back at the starting gate
wondering why a teenager had fins.  I asked why he did and she
said it was a stupid question - he ordered them from Sears.  Then
I asked.... something else.... and someone stepped into my brain
and erased memories."
     "Mulder, that's ridiculous."
     He made his hand into a fist, pressed it against his
forehead.  The horror advanced and receded.  Scully said,
reasonably, "You seem to remember the conversation pretty well."
     "How do I know?  Part of it is gone.  I remember what I
said, but what else?  Did she dance the hunca-munca?  Read
Shakespeare?  Stand on her head?  All I know is that someone
invaded my brain to take something away."
     "How do you know?"
     "I felt it.  I've felt it before, Scully.  Remember Allen's
Air Force Base?"
     She nodded, remembering his face when she had found him.
"How did I get here?" he had asked.  She said, "What happened
then?"
     "I ran.  I wanted to get away form it.  I guess it worked."
     "And Jubilee?"
     "She said something.... I wasn't really listening."  He shut
his eyes.  "She said, 'Oh, sorry', as if there was someone else
there listening to us.  Then she said, 'Jeannie, stop.  He knows
you're there.  He's freaking.'  She was right."
     "You didn't see anyone else?"
     "See?  No."
     They thought for a moment. "Jeannie," said Scully.  "Jean
Grey is the name of Scott Summers' wife."
     Mulder nodded.  Memory was not returning, but he felt calmer
with distance between him and the mind-probe.  "So what happened
to you?"
     "I met one of Xavier's colleagues.  The one who helped him
write 
'Spectroscopy use in analysis of mutagenic signatures', Dr. Hank
McCoy."
     "Hank?  Someone's really named Hank?"
     "Why not?  Henry McCoy used to be Xavier's student.  He
entertained himself and told her had been studying Mike Keenan
since before he was killed.  They knew of his physical
abnormalities and were trying to ascertain their course -
apparently it fits with a genetic theory of human development
that Xavier is working on with Hank and Dr. Moira MacTaggert.  I
couldn't understand all the details without doing more reading on
the subject, but it has to do with spontaneous anomalous
chromosome realignment at adolescence.  In other words, it seems
that when he reached puberty, if became obvious that Mike was
born with a genetic variation."
     "He became a fish boy?  A freak?"
     She said patiently, "He had some genetic coding that most
people don't have.  McCoy called this the x-factor."
     "How did they know about Mike in the first place?"
     "He didn't say."
     "Did he say who killed him?"
     "No."
     "Too bad.  Or how he knew about it?"
     "Hank was one of the people who found him dead.  And who
called the police."
     "Anonymously."
     "Yes, anonymously."
     "And you believed his story?"
     "There's something I haven't told you."
     "Oh?"  He gave her a suspicious sideways glance.  It was
dark now.  Her profile was stubborn.
     "I haven't told you what Dr. Henry McCoy looks like."
     "A blond hunk?"
     "No."
     "Nerdy with glasses and lab coat?"
     "Uh... well, you get two out of three there.  I wouldn't say
he looked nerdy, though."
     "Okay: you're going to tell me there's something wrong with
his eyes."
     "Nope.  Well, actually, he's mildly myopic - needs glasses
for reading.  But that isn't it."
     "Well?"
     "Fur, Mulder.  He has blue fur.  All over his body.  Like
a... well, like an ape.  Or something.  If an ape was blue."
     "Blue fur."
     "All over his body."
     "You saw his whole body?  What kind of discussion was this?"
     "He wears shorts.  And glasses.  And a lab coat.  And he can
do things... he somersaulted over me.  He can type with his
toes."
     She had, for once, silenced him.  He put his forehead
against the steering wheel again.  When he lifted his head, he
seemed less pale. "Scully," he said, "I think you had a weirder
time than I did."
 
- End of Part 2 -

--
Namaste,
Elizabeth

-- ab248@FreeNet.Carleton.ca -- Ottawa, Canada --


From math.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!chi-news.cic.net!nntp.coast.net!torn!nott!cunews!freenet-news.carleton.ca!FreeNet.Carleton.CA!ab248 Mon Jul  1 10:38:51 1996
Article: 20775 of alt.tv.x-files.creative
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From: ab248@FreeNet.Carleton.CA (Elizabeth Holden)
Newsgroups: alt.tv.x-files.creative
Subject: Sentinels (Part 3 of 3)
Date: 1 Jul 1996 13:54:51 GMT
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Sender: ab248@freenet3.carleton.ca (Elizabeth Holden)
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Status: RO


This is the third of three parts of "Sentinels".
 
Disclaimer:  SENTINELS is a crossover story based on the TV show
X-Files and the Marvel mutant comics X-Men, The Uncanny X-Men,
Generation X and X-Force.  So all the X-Files characters (Mulder,
Scully, Skinner, the Smoking Man) are copyright Chris Carter and
Ten Thirteen Productions, while all the X-Men Characters (Charles
Xavier, Wolverine, Storm, Cyclops, Phoenix, and so on) are
copyright Marvel Comics Group and/or Marvel Entertainment Group.
No infringement on any copyright is intended, and this is done for
no profit to myself except my own pleasure and amusement.
 
The alert reader will notice that I have taken some liberties with
the Marvel Universe in order to make it mesh with the world of X-
Files.   That was part of the fun.
 
This is the first time I have posted a story, and I'd love to hear
feedback.  You can e-mail me at ab248@FreeNet.Carleton.Ca.
 
* * *
 
SENTINELS
 
An X-Files/X-Men Crossover Story by Elizabeth Holden
 
Part 3 of 3
 
Salem Center, New York.  
11:21 p.m.
 
     Back at the motel, Mulder took the laptop and modem and
dialled the number he knew so well.   Involving the Lone Gunmen
in his cases was a risky proposition, involving give as well as
take.  Sometimes it was necessary.  Sometimes it was more than
necessary.  But it worried him.
     It took them half an hour to get back to him.  He was dozing
by then, facing a nightmare of invaded thoughts and missing
moments.  He sat up, clearing his head instantly, the way he
sometimes did.  "Well?  Got anything on Weapon X?"
     Frohike said, "You bet we do. Scully there?"
     "No."
     "Well..."  He would have gone on, but Langly interrupted
him. "Do you know what you're into here, Mulder?  This is heavy
shit."
     "That much I'd guessed.  If I knew more, I wouldn't need to
ask you."
     Byers said, "We're talking deep secret ops.  Stuff that only
a few people know the full story on, and that's need-to-know
status."
     Langly: "Scary, we're talking scary.  Big time.  
Sabretooth.  Deadpool. Crazy guys.  Wolverine."
     "Yeah, I met one of them."
     There was a shocked silence.  "Run," said Langly.  "Do not
walk, run.  We're talking major psychos.  At least, that's the
rumour. Have to be, to be involved in Weapon X."
     "Explain," said Mulder.
     "Bio-enhancement experimentation - " said Langly.
     "Mutilation of human subjects - " Frohike said at the same
time.
     "Hubris," said Byers.  That silenced the other two.  They
looked at him. 
     "Men playing God," he explained, a little sheepishly.
     "Who?"  asked Mulder. "Back up guys, I'm not getting a clear
story."
     "The Canadian government wants to cover it up," explained
Langly patiently.  "It's a programme they have, under the
auspices of something called Department K.  Don't know where it
is, or even for sure what it is, but they medically alter people
to create metahuman operatives."
     "Took out a guy's skeleton, they say," said Frohike. 
"Replaced it with some alloy."
     "Either you have to be crazy to get into that programme, or
they took crazies to work on.  Any case, there've been hush-up
scandals, a few mass killings that the truth will never be known
on."
     "Excuse me," said Mulder. "You're talking about Canada? 
That country to the north of us?  Maple syrup and Wayne Gretzky?"
     "Beavers," said Frohike.
     "Hosers."
     "Anne of Green Gables."
     "G'day, eh?"
     "Anne Murray and Bryan Adams."
     "Snow."
     "Nelson Eddy and Jeannette MacDonald."
     "Molson's X."
     "Right, right," interrupted Mulder, realizing that they were
showing no inclination to stop.  "I thought Canadians were
supposed to be good guys.  Undefended border, peacekeeping
forces, all that."
     There was a pause while they stared at him sympathetically
over the electronic connection, as they might stare at an infant
with brain damage.
     "Okay, I get it.  Covert monsters.  So who is Wolverine?"
     "One of those guys.  One they altered somehow.  He's not
with the Canadians any more.  Free agent."
     "And Xavier?"
     Silence. "No scoop on him," said Byers.
     "Yeah, he's what he seems.  Scientist.  Bio-genetics.  Hangs
out with the Nobel prize crowd."
     "Moira MacTaggert of Muir Island.  Now, there's a babe,"
said Frohike.  "A scientist, but a babe just the same."
     "What's the connection between Wolverine and Xavier?"
     They looked at each other. "Connection?"
     "There's a connection?"
     "I'll let you know when I figure it out," said Mulder.  He
thought.  "Any ideas on Mike Keenan?"
     "I don't know about ideas," said Byers. "But you might like
to look at this week's National Enquirer.  Some reporter got
photographs."
     "Nobody'll believe it," said Mulder.  "Thanks, guys."
     "Da nada," said Langly.
 
     He didn't feel like sleeping.  We went out, into the cool
evening air.  There were too many variables, too many gaps in the
equation.  
     He drove to Graymalkin Lane.  It was quiet, tonight.  He
parked the car near the path where Mike Keenan had died.  Foolish
to let himself be distracted by tangents, or by his own
nightmares of missing memories.  The point, the key, the
important thing was a dead boy.  Why kill a kid?
     Because he was different.  Because there were fins on his
arms and back.  Because he could breathe underwater.
     Why kill him, for that?
     And how?
     Did Mike himself know what had come for him?
     A lifetime's preoccupation made him aware of the sound from
the sky before it was consciously audible.  He got quickly out of
the car, and looked up at the clear, moonlit sky.  Something
large was flying over the field - three shapes, in formation. 
Not saucers.  Not oblongs.  Things shaped like.... things with
lights like headlights in the front, like eyes.... things shaped
in roughly anthropomorphic form, but metallic.  They turned in
formation at a point roughly a hundred yards from where Mulder
stood.
     Then suddenly a wind sprang up.  
     One moment it was calm.  The next, Mulder was grabbing the
car for fear he might be swept away.  In the sky above him was a
man with wings, swooping - no, surely, that couldn't be right. 
Was he hallucinating?  And a flying woman, without wings.... He
heard a shout.
     He turned.  The girl, Jubilee, stared at him, glaring as if
he had done something wrong. "You shouldn't be here!" she
stormed, and raised her arms as if he had threatened her.  Lights
- explosions - the threw up his arms to protect himself from a
barrage of weaponsfire, backing away.  Something hit him from
behind.  His head swam, and he fell hard.  The last thing he saw
while falling was Wolverine standing over him, and the last thing
he felt, mixed with his anger, was the pain of the blow that
felled him.
 
     He awoke with a headache, and it was morning.  He was in his
bed, in the hotel room.  Someone had removed his shoes, but he
still wore his coat, muddy from the grime of the road.  There was
a pounding in his head.  No, the pounding was at the door.  It
took him a moment to realize the door was unlocked.  "Mulder?" 
shouted Scully. "Are you there?"
     He sat up, hurting.  "Come in," he said.
     She came in.  "Why didn't you answer your phone? Mulder! 
What happened?  You look terrible."
     "Thanks."
     "We got a call from Skinner.  We're to go back to
Washington."
     "Why?"
     "No explanation."
     "Why now?"
     There was no answer and no choice.  They went back to
Washington.
 
     
FBI HQ
Saturday, Oct 14
 
     Mulder and Scully sat waiting to go into Skinner's office. 
There were several men already in there.  They didn't have much
to say to each other.  Mulder had given Scully a curt, edited
account of the events of the middle of the night.  Her face had
revealed nothing of her real reactions, out of kindness or
incredulity.  Flying creatures with lit eyes; men with wings;
mysterious attacks; a weapons attack without weapons.   He
couldn't explain and didn't try.  His head ached.  He gulped
aspirin and tried to get some sleep on the plane.  
     It was a short flight.
     The door to Skinner's office opened.  "In," he said, leaving
it ajar.  They walked in.
     Mulder had changed to a clean coat but he still felt like
roadkill.  Scully look composed and neat.  In fact, she looked
downright perky.  Mulder hated her.  Hated Skinner more. 
     There were four men in the room with Skinner.  Skinner sat,
pen behind his ear, and glared at Mulder and Scully.  The Smoking
Man looked at Mulder, and smiled.   Mulder felt the urge to
twitch.  Beside him, a small insignificant man failed to meet
anyone's eye.   On his other side, a beefy man with a short red
hair and glasses looked at them as if they were lab specimens.  
     Mulder's report was brief and to the point.  The death, the
body, the nature of the town, the presence of the Xavier
Institute, which they had visited without uncovering further
evidence - he touched briefly on each event without elaboration. 
Scully account was equally terse, but included medical data.  "I
have not received a report on the blood sample I sent to the lab
for DNA testing," she finished.
     "No. I received it," said Skinner.  He did not say, but it
was understood, that no report would be arriving on Scully's
desk.
     The red-haired man, who had not been introduced, said,
"Could you determine the nature of the appendages on the arms of
the deceased?"
     "No, sir."
     "Have you any theories, Dr. Scully?"
     She said blandly, "I feel I have not yet enough information
to make a valid theory."
     The red-haired man gave them a look which seemed to say: You
are the best the FBI has to offer?  And you haven't a clue?  The
look was contemptuous and victorious at the same time.  Mulder
thought: You smug bastard.  Whose wild goose chase is this?
     "Heard enough, Gyrich?" asked the Smoking Man.  Gyrich
nodded.  He rose. "This case is closed.  You'll hear from us," he
said to Skinner, and the three departed without speaking further
to Scully or to Mulder.  Mulder stopped holding his breath.
     Skinner said, "You can go."  They rose.  He added, to
Mulder, "Her.  Not you."
     Mulder sat again.  Scully left, and closed the door behind
her.
     "You weren't telling the whole truth," said Skinner.
     "So what more did you want?  Stories about a kid with a skin
condition so he looks like a one of Duane Barry's nightmares? 
Stories about things that go bump in the night on the back of my
head?  Stories about beautiful black women with funny eyes?"
     Skinner held up his hand. "No. I don't want to hear it.  Go
to the bottom line.  What have you stumbled across?"
     "Too many questions.  An academic institution where one of
the leading scientists has blue fur all over his body and the
Headmaster has a wheelchair with no wheels."
     "Is that relevant?"
     "To what?  To the dead boy?  Probably not.  What we have is
a murder that may never be solved because the case is closed as
soon as it opened.  Whose toes did we tread on?  The Canadians?"
     "The what?  Mulder, what does Canada have to do with this?"
     "I wish I knew.  Do you know about Weapon X?"
     "Never heard of it."
     "Department K?"
     "What's that?"
     "A guy named Wolverine?"
     "Is this a joke?"
     "I hope not.  Someone is meddling with my case. Someone is
meddling with my head - again.  I don't like it."
     Skinner met his gaze.  "You want to go back."
     "Easy guess.  But the case is closed."
     "Oh?  I didn't hear myself say that."  Skinner took the pen
from behind his ear, tapped impatiently on the stack of papers on
his desk.  "Go back to Salem Center.  If there's no payoff,
Mulder, forget it and come back to Washington.  If there is
payoff... don't rock the boat too hard.  Push the wrong buttons
and I'll have Gyrich's goons coming down on my ass like masonry."
 
     They were back in Salem Center by midnight.  This time,
Mulder had a good, long sleep on the plane and felt refreshed. 
It was Scully who looked travel-worn, but she wanted to waste no
time.  "We're here," she said. "We learn what we can.  We
disturbed an ant-hill somehow.  We might as well find out who the
ants are."
     They drove in their rented car to the Xavier Institute. 
They sat for a moment at the roadside.  Scully said, "You really
think they're up to no good, don't you?"
     He faced her. "You really think they're pristine pure, don't
you?"
     She shrugged.  "I don't think they killed Mike Keenan."
     "Someone did."
     "Or something."
     "So.  We go in?"
     "Mulder, this is highly irregular.  Not to mention illegal."
     They were in jeans and jackets, armed and ready for
anything.  Including shapes in the sky and blows on the head. 
"Go back if you like," said Mulder. "I'll pretend you didn't know
what I was up to."
     She answered that with a glare, and then they broke into the
Xavier Institute for Higher Learning.
     Since Mulder had taken electronic impressions of the locks,
getting inside was easy.
     Dark and silent, the place was no less spooky than in
daylight.  They went straight to the elevator and Mulder fiddled
with the controls.  It wasn't straightforward; but he persuaded
it to acceded the electronic code on his card.  
     Inside the elevator, Mulder hit one of the buttons with a
strange sigil on it.  "What is that?" asked Scully.  "Was this
thing made in Korea?"
     "That's not Korean," said Mulder.
     The doors opened, and they were in a corridor with strange
metal doors before them.  The doors were oddly shaped and marked
with symbols, but there was a button marked 'open'.  Mulder
pushed it before Scully or common sense could stop him.
     Suddenly they were in the middle of a battle.
     They were out of doors, in a dimly lit city.  Missiles flew
over their head - they ducked into the shelter of a half-shelled
building.  Directly above them was a humanoid shape, hovering. 
The size of, perhaps, ten men, it was metallic in grey and red;
its eyes shone like searchlights, and it made a low hum as it
floated.
     The wind whirled.  Floating on the air with a swirling cape,
a black woman with white hair and remarkable eyes swooped past
them, deflecting the metallic giant.  It boomed, TARGET: STORM
and turned in swift formation.  
     Wolverine, in a costume of brown and yellow, leaped on the
thing, punching it with his fists, sharp claws growing from his
knuckles.
     A sign flashed: "Intruder Alert.  Intruder Alert."
     "No shit, sugah," said a mellow female voice.  A woman flew
down to land beside Mulder and Scully.  "Don't y'all move," she
said, grinned, and flew away again.
     "There's another one," said Mulder, his gun cocked in his
hand.  One of the flying robots was coming toward them.  He
aimed.... was about to fire.... and his gun was knocked aside by
a flaming playing card.
     A flash of red laser-fire knocked the gun out of his hand. 
He looked up as he curled himself into a ball, dodging into the
shelter of the wall.  The laser-fire had come from a man in a
visor, the laser directly from where his eyes should be.
     He looked at Scully.  She had a smudge of dirt across her
cheek. "Any theories?"
     "About how to get out of here?"
     "About where we are."
     "Bosnia?"
     There was an explosion in the dirt beside them.  Jubilee
made a three-point landing beside it, crowing.  "Got 'im!"  She
began to climb up the wall, and disappeared over a roof.
     "She's just a kid," said Scully, appalled.  
     "Through the looking glass," said Mulder.
     "What?"
     "Just thinking aloud.  Watch it, the thing's coming back."
     Before the robot could attack them, it was waylaid in midair
by the woman in green, the one with the southern accent; a man in
a trench coat; and the redhead they had seen in the wedding
photo.
     Scully said, "Do you think we can find the door again, and
get out of here?"
     "Not without my gun," said Mulder grimly.  Dr. McCoy had
joined the party fighting the robot in the air.  He did a triple
somersault, and landed neatly near where Jubilee had been. 
"Dana!  So happy you could make the party," he said.   He dodged
a laser-shot that almost singed his arm, with a pratfall that
turned into a back-flip.  Scully said, "Hank, what is going on?"
     "Sentinels," he explained, as if that made it all clear.  
     Since she looked baffled he said, "You hadn't figured out
yet that it was a Sentinel that killed Mike Keenan?"
     "Beast!"   Someone shouted a warning, and a Sentinel moved
above them so fast that not even McCoy could move.  He was bathed
in violet light.  "Aw.... tarnation!" he fumed, and someone said,
"End sequence."
     The lights, the buildings, the smoke, the chaos disappeared.
     Suddenly they were in a large empty room, a room much larger
than the Xavier mansion appeared to be, but still much smaller
than the outdoor environment they had been in before. 
     Mulder saw his gun, picked it up off the floor, reset the
safety lock, and put it in his holster.
     Scully looked up at a window high in the wall.  She looked
at the people who were standing now in front of her - eight of
them, oddly dressed.  
     The man with the hood and the visor which covered his eyes,
said, "Agent Scully.  Agent Mulder.  We meet again."  It was
Scott Summers.  The red-haired woman came and stood beside them. 
 
     "Pleased to meet you," she said.  "I am Jean Grey.  I
believe you have met my husband, and Dr. McCoy.  Allow me to
present Gambit, Jubilee, Rogue, Storm. and Wolverine."
     The man in the trench coat had glowing red eyes.
     With a snikt, Wolverine's claws disappeared.
     A voice above them said, "You can handle this?"
     "It's under control, Bishop," said Summers.   The light in
the window above went out.  He added, "Sorry to scare you like
that, but it seemed useful to make you part of our exercise
there.  We don't stop our work in the Danger Room during the
middle of a sequence unless absolutely necessary."
     "Danger room?" said Scully.  She looked around.  "How apt."
     "So what do we do with them?" asked the woman in green.  She
nodded at Mulder and Scully.  Her curling hair had a white streak
down the middle of her head.  Her looks were striking, almost as
much so as that of the tall black woman - Storm - whose eyes
looked perfectly normal.  Scully glanced at Mulder, and realized
that if he had said her eyes were opaque and white, they had
been.  "You don't need to apologize, Cyclops, as far as ah can
see.  They didn't exactly bring their engraved invitations."
     "I think we should tell them what's going on," said Summers. 
"We don't need to be paranoid.  They aren't with Magneto or
Apocalypse, they're FBI."
     "I agree, Scott," said Jean Grey.  "We can work with them."
     "With Feds?"  The man in the trench coat moved impatiently. 
He had graceful lean limbs, and a long silver staff in his hand. 
The black gloves left two of his fingers uncovered.  The eyes,
glowing faintly red, looked at them as if they had crawled out
from under a rock.  He smiled at Scully.  Not sure what to make
of him, she found herself smiling back.
     "They deserve the truth," said Storm.  Her voice was
resonant and strong.
     "Ah can handle that," said Rogue. "Far as it goes."  She
glanced at the man in the trench coat, and frowned.  
     "Trut'?"  He said.  "Why?  Why work wit' de Feds?  Dangerous
ground, mes amis."
     "I don't like it either," said Wolverine.  "Playin' with
Feds is playin' their game.  We don't need that."
     "Why?  You used to be one of them," shot back Jean.
     "That's why I don't trust 'em."
     The black woman said, "Not all government agents are evil,
or against us."
     "Non?" challenged the man with glowing eyes.  Gambit.  "Name
one."
     "Val Cooper."
     "Henry Peter Gyrich?  Steven Trask?"
     "Nick Fury."
     "He's dead."
     ""Zactly," said Wolverine.  The claws suddenly appeared -
snikt! - on his left hand, by his side.  Slowly, they retracted.
     "Storm!  Wolverine!  Gambit!"  Jean silenced him.  "We could
argue all night and get nowhere.  We have more important
problems.  Quick vote: what do we do with Agents Scully and
Mulder?  Whatever we do, we should do it fast."  And why do I
have the feeling, thought Mulder, that my gun would be useless
here?  Whatever they might decide?  He set his jaw.  Jean Grey
continued, "I suggest we tell them what they need to know about
us and about Mike Keenan."
     "The Sentinels too?" asked McCoy.
     "Why not?  It's their business."
     "Agreed," said Storm promptly.
     "Agreed," said Scott.
     "Absolutely," said Hank McCoy.  He looked pleased.
     "Fine by me," said Rogue.
     "Sure," said Jubilee, shrugging.
     Wolverine shrugged.  "Yeah.  Might as well."
     They all looked at Gambit.  He was lighting a cigarette.  He
did not use a match; didn't need to.  He took a drag, let it out
slowly, and looked them all over, one by one.  The cigarette hung
on his lip. "No way," he said.  
     Jean Grey said coldly, "If you're going to smoke that thing,
take it outside."
     The Cajun walked out of the room.  The door closed
decisively behind him.  Jean said, "We might as well go somewhere
comfortable."
     "Ah'll be off, then," said Rogue.  "Y'all don't need me."
     Jubilee disappeared as well.  The rest went to a large
sitting room, with sofas, tables, a fireplace.  Someone had been
in the middle of a game of cards on one of the tables.  Scott
Summers leaned against a wall, his arms crossed as they had been
in Xavier's room.  His costume of gold-trimmed blue spandex made
him seem larger than he had appeared in street clothes yesterday. 
On his shoulder was the red and black X of the Institute.  His
wife, in a costume of mellow gold, put her hand on his shoulder
for a moment, and then turned back to Mulder and Scully.  Mulder
noticed that there was no longer a smudge on Scully's cheek.  The
illusions of the Danger Room were gone.
     Wolverine sat on the edge of a chair, his elbows on his
knees.  Storm sat casually in a lone chair, her knees drawn up. 
McCoy stood by the fireplace.  Mulder noticed that he had fangs. 
Scully hadn't mentioned that.
     Jean Grey said to Mulder, "I owe you an apology.   "I
tampered with your consciousness without asking your consent.  I
did not think you would detect me, but you did.  Whether or not
your were trespassing, whether or not you were a threat to us, I
should not have done that.:
     Mulder's eyes held no compromise.  "You stole something from
me.  Give back what you took."
     She smiled slightly.  "I will.  I will do it in words, not
to make my error worse yet.  I took three words from you, Mr.
Mulder.  The first was the White Queen, a reference to a teacher
employed at the Xavier School for Gifted Youngsters.  Her name is
Emma Frost.  The second was X-Men.  We are the X-Men.  The third
word was Sentinels.  A Sentinel killed Mike Keenan."
     The words fit, like pieces into a jigsaw puzzle.  "Thank
you," said Mulder.  He sat down on the sofa beside Scully.
     "Would you like something to drink?"
     "Coffee," said Scully gratefully.  Mulder shook his head. He
watched as a movement caught his eye.  A coffee pot, sitting on a
hot plate, lifted of its own accord and poured hot coffee into a
cup.  "Cream and sugar?" asked Jean Grey, and Scully nodded. 
Cream and a teaspoon of sugar were delicately put into the cup by
an invisible hand.  The cup then floated across the room to
Scully.   She was watching with a faintly glazed expression. 
Mulder couldn't help thinking of Beauty and the Beast.  
     Not a drop was spilled.  Scully took the cup with outward
calm.  "Thank you," she said, and took a sip.
     Jean Grey said, "I was able to pour your coffee without
touching it because I have a high degree of telekinesis as well
as telepathy.  We all attended Professor Xavier's School for
Gifted Youngsters because we are all gifted - or cursed - with
special abilities.  Together here we learned to use these
abilities to the best advantage, and to defend ourselves against
forces that would destroy us."
     "Isn't that a little paranoid?" asked Scully.
     "Oh, no!"  Jean Grey's expression hardened. "Just look at
Mike Keenan if you doubt the stakes involved.  He was a child,
Dr. Scully, and they killed him for the crime of being different. 
For being like us.  For being a mutant."
     "A mutant," said Scully.
     "A person with special skills which appear at puberty."
     "Like telekinesis?"
     "Or gymnastic ability, in Hank's case.  Optic plasma beams,
in the case of my husband.  Storm has psionic control of weather
patterns.  Wolverine has a healing factor."
     "And claws," said Mulder.
     "Yes.  Mike Keenan was able to breathe under water.  We knew
about him - we try to trace such people - we knew about him a
full week before he died.  We meant to talk to him, to bring him
into the school where he could find friends who would accept him
as he was.  So he could accept himself.  Where he could be free
from the hostility people show to those who are different."
     "He was difficult to approach," said Scott, taking up the
story.  "He kept to himself - his reaction to the changes taking
place in his body was to become reclusive.  We did not want to
approach his parents without talking to him first, but we saw no
opening.  He hadn't even told his parents what was happening to
him.  Sometimes kids react that way.  What would they think if we
had gone to them first?  Strangers telling them their kid was a
freak?"
     "So we waited," said Wolverine. "Bad idea, now, but we
didn't know that.  He was scared.  We knew that.  We meant to
catch him on the way home, tell him we knew what he was goin'
though, that we could help."
     "We thought Paige might make the first contact," said Jean. 
"She's quite pretty, and not much older than he was."
     "I didn't work," said Wolverine.  "We were too cautious. 
Too blamed careful.  The Sentinels got to him first."
     "We saw the Sentinel leave," said Scott.  "We were a mile
away still.  We went to the area, and found him already dead. 
Dead maybe ten minutes.  If we'd been ten minutes earlier....."
     In the silence following the remark there was a quiet
'snikt'.  Scully stared at Wolverine's hands in fascination. 
Storm put her hand on his.  He retracted the claws without
comment or apology.
     "We took blood samples," said McCoy.  "We did tests.  The
boy was perfectly healthy, Dr. Scully.  He was simply a victim of
his own genes and the destruction by a Sentinel."
     "What are the Sentinels?" asked Scully.  "Who is behind
them?"
     "The sort of people who think giant killer robots are a
progressive step," said Jean Grey.  "Originally, a man named
Trask.  Now - we don't know.   Originally it was a government
project.  We suspect there is still covert government involvement
from at least one agency.  We can't prove it."
     "If we knew who," said Wolverine, "We could do somethin'
about it.  As it is - we fight as best we can."
     "Sentinels are humanoid constructs with one purpose only,"
said Storm.  "To kill mutants.  They do it well."
     "Giant robots," said Scully again.
     Jean Grey said,     "They have reprogrammable capabilities
and are relentless in their hunt.  The only way to stop a
Sentinel is to destroy it.  We have learned how to destroy them. 
We can do it.
     "Mike Keenan didn't know how.  He didn't even know what a
Sentinel was."
     "Ten minutes too late," said Wolverine.
     "So we called the police.  That's it.  The whole story."
     Scully said, "Who would have resources like that?  Who would
want to use them against you?"
     Hank McCoy said, "We were hoping that you might have some
ideas about that."
     "Why did the Sentinel go after the kid?" said Mulder.
"Wouldn't it make more sense to go after you?"
     "The bigger target?"  Storm nodded. "Make no mistake, Mr.
Mulder, they have gone after us and they will do so again.  But
that night, they found Mike Keenan, and he was an easier target."
     "One of our more outstanding failures," said McCoy.
     The door slammed open, almost scaring Scully into dropping
her cup.  The large black man called Bishop stood in the doorway
with a massive gun.  "The Sentinels are about to attack," he
said. "Move!"
     The others were on the move as soon as he finished talking. 
Jean Grey said quickly, "You will be safest if you drive away. 
They do not pursue humans."  Then she too was gone.
     Scully and Mulder went back to their car.  It was parked as
they left it, hours earlier, at the roadside.  It was almost dawn
now.  They stood by the vehicle, looking back at the mansion,
watching the pink and blue of the sky slowly become lighter over
the stately roofs.  "Do you think they were telling the truth?"
asked Mulder.
     "I don't know what to think.  But I know what I saw."
     "Blue fur," said Mulder.  He shook his head.
     Beyond the mansion, they saw a crack of thunder in a
otherwise clear sky.  "Storm?" said Scully.
     Mulder shrugged.  He said, "There's the kid you mentioned. 
 
Leech."
     The boy was walking purposefully across the grounds.  As
they watched, a Sentinel loomed out from among the trees.
     The boy, walking the other direction, had not seen it.  But
it certainly had seen him.  
     Mulder pulled out his gun, as futile as a spitball against a
machine of that mass.   He shouted, "Leech!" and the child looked
up, with big eyes in a strange alien face.  The child looked at
him, not at the Sentinel.  
     Mulder ran.
     He crossed the lawn and tackled the boy.  He heard gunshots
behind him - Scully was shooting at the Sentinel.  He covered the
boy with his body, hoping that if the Sentinel had to go through
him to get the child, it might turn away.   It was created by
humans, was it not?  To kill mutants?  In which case, killing
humans was perhaps not in its programming.  In which case, it was
possible even that the Sentinel could not detect the boy through
his body.
     He heard the movement of air as the Sentinel passed over
him, a whoosh that made his ears pop.  
     Then he heard shots, the clap of thunder, and an explosion.
     A hand touched his shoulder.   "S'okay, bub.  You can get up
now.  Hey, Leech, that you under there?"
     "Logan!" said the boy, smiling a toothy smile as he picked
himself off the ground. 
     On the ground, like a damaged and unsightly whale, a
Sentinel lay half ripped open by lightning, telekinesis, optical
plasma bolts, big guns, and whatever else it might have taken.
     Storm ran and gave the boy a hug.  She looked over his head
at Mulder, smiling the loveliest of smiles.  "Thank you, Fox
Mulder.  For what you have done for us... no thanks could be too
great."
     "It was nothing," said Mulder.  The kid was sort of cute,
once you started to get used to him.  As for the woman.... he
felt a brief pang of envy for the kid she was hugging.  Some guys
had all the luck.
     Scully, beside Mulder, said, "You okay?"
     "Yeah."
     "You look exhausted.  I think we should go back to the hotel
and get some sleep."
     Mulder nodded.  He said, "Scully?"
     "What?"
     "Do you ever get the feeling that your life is really quite
routine and dull compared to some?"
     "No," said Scully.
     They started back to the road.  Behind them, Scott Summers -
Cyclops - said, "Agent Mulder?  Agent Scully?"
     They stopped.  He came up to them.  "I don't know what will
happen now," he said.  "Life goes on, one way or another.  I just
wanted to say.... Thanks."  He put a hand, for a moment, on
Mulder's shoulder.  He nodded to Scully.
     Then he walked back into the house.
     "Da nada," said Mulder, watching him go.
 
- End -

--
Namaste,
Elizabeth

-- ab248@FreeNet.Carleton.ca -- Ottawa, Canada --



