From: stellar_dust_x@yahoo.com (Katy)
Date: 27 Aug 2004 04:03:37 -0700
Subject: [all-xf] REV: Threnody: Divested
Source: atxc


TITLE: Threnody: Divested
AUTHOR: stellar_dust
EMAIL: stellar_dust_x@yahoo.com
WEBSITE: http://katycat.net/xfiles
SPOILERS: Requiem, Within, Without.  Ah, heck, the whole 
series.
RATING: PG-13
SUMMARY: "Scully, you have to understand that they're 
taking abductees.  You're an abductee.  I'm not going to 
risk ... losing you."  But what if he did?
KEYWORDS: AU, mytharc, angst, MSR, season 8
ARCHIVE: Absolutely.  And I'd love to come visit.
FEEDBACK:  Please, please, would you?  This thing is 
*dying* for feedback.  Good, bad, I don't care, I want to 
know what you think!
DISCLAIMER: They all belong to Chris.  It's just as well; 
after all, Mulder never went through such hell when *he* 
was in charge.  Not very often, anyway.  Usually.  Except
when ... Ah, whatever, just don't sue me, please, ok?
DATE: Written Jan. to April 2004.  Completed 2004-04-03.
NOTES:  This story is the first in a series that will
eventually compose a whole virtual season 8.  "Threnody" 
is a synonym for "requiem."  It's an AU, positing 
that Scully got abducted instead of Mulder halfway through 
Requiem.  Everything else is the same - at the beginning, 
anyway.  I'm planning to explore Mulder and Doggett's 
relationship (I have *no* experience writing Doggett, so 
Doggett fans especially, send feedback!), Mulder's illness, 
etc.  Some episodes will happen, some won't, some will only 
be referred to in passing.  In any case .. it should be an 
interesting ride, and each episode should be fairly self-
contained - much like the real Season 8.  This is also my
first attempt at writing anything really long.  Hopefully,
though, I can maintain a flow of shorter fics while
working on this, and still write my masters' thesis, too.
*grin*  And now, curtain up on Scully!


X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X


Divested

"Scully, you have to understand that they're taking 
abductees.  You're an abductee.  I'm not going to risk ... 
losing you."  -- Mulder, Requiem


X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X


Scully knew that if she turned around, she'd see Mulder.  
He would be covering ground rapidly with his long strides, 
taking in every detail of the area.  He would be worried.  
No, she corrected herself, he would be *frantic*.

She could almost hear him now, in high, wavering tones:  
"Scullllyyy!"

She didn't turn around.

Is this what it was like, Scully wondered?  Is this what it 
was like, the first time, when Duane Barry took her to 
Skyland Mountain, and they came?  She didn't remember.  She 
never had remembered.  She wondered if she would remember 
this.

She should turn around, Scully thought.  She should go.  
She should step back.

Standing in the beam of light she could see Theresa Hoese 
and her husband, other people from Bellefleur that she 
recognized, some that she remembered from seven years ago. 
There was Billy Miles, now, she noticed, and wondered idly 
how many officers the town's police force had left.  

They looked so happy.  Radiant.  Welcoming.  As though 
nothing in the world could compare to what they were about 
to do.  Scully thought of Cassandra Spender, how she had 
been convinced that they were here to help, to do good.  
And she thought of the Twilight Zone episode, the one 
Mulder liked to watch when he was feeling ironic:  How to 
Serve Man.

And, because in the end, there really was no choice, Scully 
went.

Goodbye, Mulder, she thought.  I love you.

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

Mulder looked at the charred husk of flashlight in the 
boy's hands.  What could do this, he wondered?  Radiation?  
Is there radiation powerful enough, directed enough to set 
a flashlight aflame, and leave the person holding it 
untouched?  

"Scully," he turned to show her, to ask her, needing a 
scientific explanation before his mind concocted a thousand 
horrified possibilities.  

She wasn't there.

He turned again, scanning the forest, looking for where 
he'd seen her last - there, an opening in the undergrowth, 
foliage creating a natural fork in the overgrown game trail 
they'd been following.  No Scully.

"Do you see her?" he asked the boy.  Richie.  He looked 
around uncertainly and shook his head.

Mulder was moving now, almost running, over the log, around 
the trees, through the briars, thorns grasping hungrily at 
his jacket and slacks.  "Scully?" he called.  "Scully, can 
you hear me?  Scully!"

Suddenly Mulder was brought up short.  Almost 
imperceptibly, he felt himself rise above the ground.  He 
started to shake, uncontrollably, spasming, limbs moving 
faster than his muscles had ever been forced to work.  
Worse than that: his *brain* was vibrating.

Mulder was aware, hyperaware, his barriers down, more open 
than he'd been even when the alien writing had granted him 
telepathy.  He could feel Richie's confused, frightened 
mind, and the whole town of Bellefleur, and another, more 
familiar sense  someone he knew but couldn't place  and, 
far, far off, through fog and rain and a million lives, he 
could feel Skinner, taking the hit again for his and 
Scully's latest journey.

And he could feel Scully.  Close.  So close, her mind rapt 
and awed in a way he'd never known her to express, except 
once, under regression hypnosis.  He felt like screaming, 
or crying.

And as suddenly as it had begun, it was over, and he landed 
hard on a tough, knotted root.

Richie slid through the leaves and landed at Mulder's side, 
shaking him.  "Mr. Mulder?  Are you okay?  What happened?"

"Yeah," Mulder moved painfully, rolling over, and eased 
himself into a sitting position.  He rested his elbows on 
his knees and rubbed at his forehead.  "It's out here, all 
right.  It almost got me."  He looked up at Richie, almost 
daring to hope.  "You didn't see Scully anywhere else 
around here, did you?"

Richie shook his head, eyes wide.  "Did  did they take 
her, too?"

Mulder took a deep breath and was about to answer  he 
didn't know what he'd say, but he had to say something  
when his eyes fell on a glimmer in the leaves to his right.  
He reached out for it.

It was Scully's necklace.

Oh, God, he thought.  No.  No.  How could he have been so 
*stupid*?

He closed his fist around the charm, tightly, the pointy 
end of the cross digging into his palm, and squeezed his 
eyes shut against the flood of guilt and remorse.  Thoughts 
chased each other around his mind, fleetingly, reaching the 
conclusions his unconscious mind had already developed.  

Three deep, ragged breaths later, he opened his eyes again.  
"Richie, your friend  Gary  did he  was he ever missing,
before?  Go away for days or months at a time?"

"You mean, was he ever abducted?"  Richie's eyes flitted 
nervously through the trees around them.

Mulder nodded, mouth dry.

"Yeah," Richie whispered, frightened, licking his lips.  
"Twice."

Mulder nodded, and eased himself to his feet, placing 
Scully's necklace reverently into his pocket.  I should 
have seen it, he thought.  These aren't random abductions.  
They're taking abductees, and this time they're not coming 
back.  Not coming back ... the phrase echoed ominously, 
piteously through his mind.  Not coming back. Scully .... 

He took a few steps forward, placed his hand experimentally 
in front of him.  It flopped and flailed like a hyperactive 
fish out of water.  He pulled it back.  Scully. Oh, Scully 
.... 

"Agent Mulder!"  He whipped around at his name.  Two 
Bellefleur cops were picking their way through the forest.  
"Detective Miles and his son!  They're both missing!"

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

Mulder's entire body ached, from the dull pain behind his 
eyes to the gaping emptiness in his gut.  He fumbled with 
the hotel key, dropped it, tried again.  

Billy Miles was still missing, of course; his father was 
found dead in the trunk of his own police car, dead for at 
least three days, the coroner said, though Mulder'd spoken 
with the man just yesterday.

Was it really only yesterday that he and Scully had come 
back to Bellefleur, the scene of their first case together?  
It felt like a century.

Skinner had called that afternoon, royally pissed at them 
for leaving in the middle of an audit.  He'd commented that 
Scully wasn't answering her phone and Mulder had said, 
haltingly, yes, he knew that.  Skinner had insisted on 
starting the search process, and now Mulder was due on a 
plane back to DC at 8 AM tomorrow morning, to give 
testimony.

The lock finally clicked open beneath Mulder's shaking 
fingers, and he staggered over the threshold, and leaned 
back against the closed door.  He flicked the lights on.  
His suitcase was open on the dresser, a jumble of socks and 
underwear and the occasional tie.  Towels and running shoes 
on the floor, scraps of paper and muddled notes covering 
every available surface.  Scattered across the floor were 
all the photos and medical files on Ray Hoese's abduction 
experiences, fallen when he'd tucked Scully into his bed 
last night.  Finally Mulder let his eyes drift across the 
unmade bed, to the pile of clothing at the foot of it, his 
and Scully's garments mingled together as comfortably, as 
securely as their bodies had last night, when Scully had 
recovered from her vertigo and warmed enough to roll over 
and press her full length against him, to tell him that no, 
there was no way she'd go back to Washington, not now, 
twining her leg around his, reaching first for his t-shirt, 
his mouth, his  

Mulder choked on a sob.  No, he wasn't ready to relive that 
moment, not yet.

Mulder stumbled forward and came to his knees beside the 
bed, pressing his face into the sheets.  They smelled like 
Scully.

Why?, he thought in agony, balling his fists into the 
covers, pounding at the mattress, small sounds of pain 
escaping from his throat.  I should have pushed harder, I 
could have talked you into it, I knew this was coming, 
Scully, I could feel it, and you'd be safe now, Scully, 
safe at home .. 

There was no way he'd be able to sleep in that room 
tonight.  

Some time later, empty of tears and drained in his soul, 
Mulder rose and quickly, deliberately, packed up all of his 
things.  All the papers, tucked into a briefcase; his 
clothes balled up and stuffed in the suitcase, his extra 
suit, and the one he'd worn today, hung neatly in the 
garment bag.  As he grabbed clothes off the floor, he 
couldn't bear the thought of pulling his and Scully's 
apart, of taking hers next door and zipping them into her 
own suitcase, so into his they went, together.

And when he pulled off his suit to change into sweats, he 
reached into the pocket and gently lifted out Scully's 
necklace.  The cross glinted in the warm motel room lights, 
deep and golden and sparkling; like Scully, Mulder thought.  
I'll find you.  I have to.  I can't live *without* you.

He clasped it around his own neck, slowly and carefully, 
remembering the last time it had hung there, six years ago, 
and how he'd never wanted to see it anywhere but resting on 
Scully's chest ever again.  He tucked it under his 
turtleneck and sweatshirt, taking comfort in the cold metal 
against his skin, almost, for one tantalizing moment, 
feeling Scully's presence in the room with him.  

Later, his bags packed into the rental car, Mulder unlocked 
Scully's room and did the same, deliberately, quickly.  He 
didn't think about her, or how the entire room smelled of 
her, or the way all her clothes were perfectly folded and 
organized and unworn.  He didn't think about the way her 
hair fanned out against the pillows, or how she looked in 
the three-inch heels he found on the floor of her closet.  
And he definitely didn't think about where she was now.  He 
did smile at the sight of her laptop, still on, still 
blinking, waiting for her to type the next sentence of her 
case report.  Always responsible, Scully.

Mulder finished, locked the door, packed the car, checked 
out of the motel.  He put a hand to his chest and felt, 
through the layered fabric  like the princess and the pea, 
he thought  Scully's cross.  I'll find you.  I promise, 
Scully.  I will.  Don't give up.

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

Mulder waved his flashlight through the trees, 
concentrating hard, trying to look everywhere at once out 
of the corners of his eyes.  There!  The beam seemed to 
end, wavering, diffusing itself into the air.  Yes, this 
looks like the spot, he thought, glancing around, 
recognizing trees and fallen logs.  

He walked to where the light disappeared, stretched 
his hand out again, watched it begin its spasmodic 
vibrations.  He nodded to himself, pulled the roll of 
"Police Line - Do Not Cross" tape out of his pack, and 
knotted one end of it around the nearest tree trunk.  

Mulder started walking, sketching out a wide, rough circle.  
As he went, he played the tape out behind him, keeping one 
hand inside the field, never reaching in deeper than his 
elbow, never losing touch altogether.  In the end, when 
he reached the original tree again, he'd been walking for 
twenty minutes, outlining a circle of about 200 feet in 
diameter.  In the moonlight, he could look through the 
trees to the other side of his circle, and see the yellow 
tape there, twisted around branches.  

Well, he thought.  There it is.  I found it, I've marked 
it, and I know she's in there.  What next?

He picked up a long stick from the ground, and 
experimentally thrust it all the way into the energy field.  
Five seconds later, it bounced right back out at him.

All right, then.  Mulder thought.  He didn't want to risk a 
bullet  too much chance of being heard, or, worse yet, 
that it would penetrate the field and hurt Scully, or 
another abductee.

Mulder was at a loss.  He sank to the ground and buried his 
face in his hands.  Scully, he thought, and it was almost a 
prayer, but a prayer to Scully, directed not at the heavens 
but to someone less than two hundred feet away from him.  
Scully, I feel you so close to me, but I can't get to you.  
I need you so badly, Scully; please.  Please come back to 
me.  Please be all right.

"So you found it," said a clipped, guarded voice behind 
him.

Mulder leapt to his feet, gun out, pointed it 
instinctively.  "I swear, Krycek, if you step one foot 
closer to me, I'll shoot you."

Krycek raised his hands slowly.  "Hey now, Mulder.  We're 
on the same side here."

"What are you doing here?" Mulder motioned with the gun for 
Krycek to step further into the clearing.  He did so 
tentatively, never taking his eyes off the gun.

"The old man sent me," Krycek spat.  "To find *that*."

Mulder blinked.  "Did he, by any chance, tell you what to 
do with it once you found it?"

Krycek grinned ferociously.  "Of course not.  He doesn't 
*know* anything.  He never has."  Sarcastically, "He thinks 
he's *dying*.  He wants his *conspiracy* back, he wants his 
*power* .. "  Krycek's eyes glinted in the starlight.  "I 
want the bastard dead."

Mulder's voice broke, but his hand didn't waver.  "They 
took Scully."

"Did they?"  Krycek's face fell.  "Jesus, Mulder, I'm 
sorry."

"No, you aren't.  You know nothing."  Mulder replaced the 
gun in his waistband, and turned dismissively back to face 
the alien craft.  

"I know you loved her," Krycek said, more gently than 
Mulder had ever heard him speak.  "Isn't that enough?"

Mulder didn't respond.

"Look, Mulder, I can help you," Krycek said desperately.

"I don't trust you."

"Believe me, it's mutual." Krycek's tone was icy now.  "I 
know things, Mulder.  Things you've barely started to guess 
at.  Things that can stop this, forever.  You need me, 
Mulder.  You know you do."

"I don't need *anyone*," Mulder turned, eyes flashing, "but 
Scu "

The air suddenly came alive with sound and motion.  Bright 
flashes of white light burned into Mulder's retinas as 
leaves swirled around the men in a whirling, rising vortex.  
Bits of police line were flapping in the wind, breaking off 
of their trees and rushing to join the mad, spiraling dance.
Mulder raised his hand against the light and looked up, up,
 and far away he saw the ship, its hatch still irising shut, 
and lights, so many lights.  "Scully!" he shouted, but his 
voice was lost on the wind.

The ship seemed to hover for a moment, then soared off to 
the west, dwindling to a point of light that flared 
brightly just before it vanished.

In the clearing, the silence was oppressive.

"Scully," Mulder whispered.  He fell to his knees, hands in 
fists, defiant.  "Noooo!" he shouted.  "Sculllyyy!"

And Krycek stood, perfectly still, wondering, watching, 
listening as Mulder's screams faded into the silence of the 
woods.

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

Two mornings later, Mulder woke up in his own bed.  
Thankfully, he'd been so worn out by the fifteen-hour plane 
ride that he'd had no trouble getting to sleep.  He 
showered and dressed in a haze, trying to prepare himself 
for the questions the investigative committee would ask; 
the same ones they'd asked six years ago, when Scully had 
gone missing the first time.

Mulder paused with his tie draped over his shoulders and 
scrutinized his reflection in the bathroom mirror.  There 
were new wrinkles there, on his forehead and at the corners 
of his eyes.  I'm getting old, he thought.  I can't do this 
again, Scully; I can't bear to wait and do nothing, I can't 
be the X-Files alone again, never knowing when you'll show 
up in some hospital with a tube down your throat, or worse 
... 

You have to, said a voice in the back of his head that 
sounded like Scully's.  His voice of reason.  You can.

Mulder stared deep into his own eyes, trying to find what 
Scully would see there, what reservoirs of strength and 
courage she would insist that he had within him.  And he 
didn't move until he found it.

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

Mulder burst into A.D. Skinner's office, fists clenched, 
eyes blazing.  He carefully stopped himself from slamming 
the door behind him.

"What is going on, sir?" he asked tightly.  "There are 
agents crawling all over my office!  I can't get a straight 
answer out of them, and they won't leave!"

Skinner replaced the phone on its cradle.  He looked 
harried.  "I'm trying to figure that out, Agent Mulder.  
Believe me, this is not my idea.  I just found out about it 
myself."  He picked up a file from the table and paced back 
around behind his desk.

"Well, whose idea is it then!  They didn't do this when 
Duane Barry took her!  They're not gonna find her by 
running a," he waved his hands around, "an FBI *manhunt*!  
They know that!  And you know that, and I know that .. " 
Mulder slowed down and rubbed his cheek, mind racing.  
"There's something else going on here.  They're trying to 
cover it up.  Somebody is *already* trying to bury this, 
and they're going to succeed.  Sir, we have to *do* 
something!"  Mulder crashed his hands onto Skinner's desk 
and leaned forward, eyes wild.

Skinner stood and put a hand on Mulder's shoulder.  
"Mulder, cool it.  Just calm down.  The Duane Barry case 
wasn't an X-File."  Mulder looked at him hard, and Skinner 
backed down.  "Well, all right, it wasn't officially an X-
File.  Your office was closed up; you and Scully were 
serving as consultants for the Behavioral Sciences Unit.  
There was no *reason* to look for clues in the X-Files.  
This week, you were on an X-File; and you, Agent Mulder, 
are the only witness to her disappearance."  Mulder sank 
into one of Skinner's chairs, deflated.  "It does make 
sense, Mulder.  There's no  there's no deep conspiracy 
here."

"Sir, that doesn't change the fact that it's the wrong way 
to look.  And I want my office back, exactly the way I left 
it.  Who's running this investigation, anyway?  Who've you 
got in charge?  Why isn't it you?"

"Like I said, Mulder, I tried to put a stop to all this."  
Skinner sighed.  "But this  investigation  is being 
handled by our new Deputy Director and his golden boy, John 
Doggett."

Mulder looked at him askance.  "Our new Deputy Director?"

The phone rang, and both men looked at the digital display.  
"Kersh?"  Mulder asked incredulously.  "Alvin Kersh is the 
new DD?  When did that happen?"

"While you were in Oregon," Skinner said distractedly, and 
picked up the phone.

Well, I figured that much out for myself, Mulder thought as 
he paced the room impatiently, half an ear on Skinner's 
conversation.  

"Mulder," Skinner said finally, hanging up the phone, 
"Kersh wants to see us both immediately."

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

"Sir, I am in no fit state to give a statement, after 
witnessing *that* performance," Mulder muttered to Skinner 
as they strode out of the DD's office.  "If I walk back in 
there and pop him one in the jaw, would that be 'placing 
the FBI in a ridiculous light'?"  His fists were clenching 
and unclenching themselves as he stalked down the hall.

Skinner smiled tightly.  "I would join you on that one, 
Mulder, if it weren't both our careers on the line.  This 
isn't about finding Scully, it's about covering the FBI's ass."

They stepped into the elevator, and Mulder looked Skinner 
in the eye.  "I won't lie to them, sir.  I won't say it 
didn't happen, and I won't say it happened differently."

Skinner sighed.  "Agent Mulder, you can't help Scully if 
you lose your job.  Think about it.  She wouldn't want you 
to do this."

Mulder closed his eyes, considering, and when he opened 
them again they were set.  "You're wrong.  Scully would 
want me to find the truth.  And this is one time when a 
lie, at least that lie, won't help me do that."

Skinner took a deep breath.  "I can't help you a whole lot, 
Mulder; I didn't see any of this, and I can't corroborate 
your story.  I'm on your side, but the best I can be is a 
character witness.  I hope you realize that."

Mulder nodded slowly.  "I do, sir.  And I thank you.  But 
whatever I may need to do, I'm prepared to do it alone."

The elevator doors opened and Mulder stalked off, still 
muttering " .. 'comes at a stressful time' .. "

Skinner stared after him for a moment, sighed, then 
followed Mulder down the hallway.

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

"Where's Agent Doggett?"  Mulder shouted above the din in 
the room serving as HQ for the case.  "I want to speak to 
Agent Doggett right now!"

Skinner entered the room too late to stop him, and was 
quickly pulled away for questioning.  

A wiry-looking, middle-aged man with close-cropped brown 
hair and a pleasant expression walked up to Mulder and 
stuck out his right hand, shoving a file folder beneath his 
other arm.  "Agent Muldah?" he had a very pronounced accent. 
"I'm Agent Doggett.  What's the problem here?"

Mulder didn't shake.  "What's the problem?  What's the 
*problem*?  The problem is that my partner is missing, my 
office is being ransacked, and the agent in charge doesn't 
have the first *clue* what he's dealing with!"  Mulder's 
voice was out of control.

Doggett pulled his hand back and narrowed his eyes.  "Well, 
that's just what we're tryin' to figure out here, Agent 
Muldah.  You just step over here and tell us what happened, 
and I'm sure we can get it cleared up in no time."

"You don't want to hear what happened, Agent Doggett.  You 
don't want the truth.  You want a pretty little story that 
you can take back to Kersh, and if it ruins me in the 
process, hey, even better!  Right?  Am I right, Agent 
Doggett?"

Doggett's eyebrows were nearly climbing off the top of his 
forehead.  "Agent Muldah, I think you need to calm down "

"Calm down?  No, I do *not* need to calm down."  Mulder 
pointed a finger at the other man's chest.  "*You* need to 
step back and take a close look at what's going on here, 
Agent Doggett, because if you aren't in on it with them, 
then you are being led.  You need to take a good, long look 
at your own priorities before you continue, Agent Doggett!"

Mulder turned and began to stalk out of the room.  
"Muldah!" Doggett called, and he turned back to face the 
man.  "What?"

"You need to do some thinkin', too, Agent Muldah," Doggett 
met Mulder's eyes fearlessly.  "You need to think hard 
about how well you really knew your partner, and what she 
might've been doin' goin' off on her own like that."

Mulder blinked.  "Oh, this is beautiful.  This is just 
*precious*."  He shook his head, disgusted.  "So at least 
you don't think I killed her.  But you actually believe 
Scully would just walk off, right in the middle of a crime 
scene no less, without a word to me or to anyone?"  Mulder 
consciously lowered his voice.  "Maybe I don't know Scully 
as well as she knows herself, Agent Doggett, but you know 
*nothing* about her.  She wouldn't do this."

Mulder started toward the door once again, turned back when 
he thought of something else.  "If you want to talk to me, 
Agent Doggett, I will be in my office tomorrow.  And it had 
better be *my* office, Doggett, exactly as I left it!"  
Eyes blazing, Mulder finally, purposefully strode out of 
the room.

Doggett exhaled slowly and blinked his eyes.  So that was 
Agent Mulder, then.  Well, after that exchange, the rest of 
this investigation ought to be a snap.

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

Mulder lay back on his couch, restless, fingers tapping a 
quick tattoo on the soft leather.  He'd already called the 
Gunmen, and they'd said they would compile a map of UFO 
sightings across the US over the past week.  

Mulder needed to do something, to feel useful, to know that 
he was helping find Scully, some how, some way.  Sitting on 
his couch doing nothing didn't quite cut it.  He teetered 
on the verge of heading to the Lone Gunmen office and 
trying to give them a hand; he knew he'd just be in the 
way, though, as he had to keep reminding himself, and 
forced himself to sit back down and try, just try to find 
something, anything else he could do.  

So, he thought about Scully.  He thought of her rich, 
auburn hair, and how good she felt in his arms; he thought 
of how competent and self-assured she was, and how she 
never failed to give him a swift kick in the ass when he 
was barking up the wrong tree.  He remembered when his 
mother had died, less than a year ago, and how Scully had 
sat with him all night as he tried to come to terms and 
accept his inability to change all the various ways he'd 
failed his family.  And he fingered the necklace at his 
throat, and he thought of Scully's mother.

Maggie.  He wondered if anyone at the FBI had thought to 
give her a call.  That's something I can do, he realized.  
I need to talk to her, anyway ...

He dialed.

"Hello?"  She didn't sound too good.

"Mrs. Scully, this is Fox Mulder.  Are  are you all 
right?"

"Fox!  Oh, I've been hoping you would call!  What's 
happened to Dana?  Is she okay?  Where is she?"

"Mrs. Scully, I don't know what the FBI has told you  "

"They haven't told me anything, Fox, I just, just, two days 
ago, I started to get these feelings, just like that, that 
other time, and  Fox, she isn't okay, is she?  Please tell 
me what happened!"

"Mrs. Scully, it  it is.  She, we were out in Oregon on a 
case, and  well, they  they took her again, Mrs. Scully."

Mrs. Scully was quiet for a moment, and in the silence 
Mulder heard a couple of small, tiny clicks in the line.

"Oh  oh, my God.  Dana."  Mrs. Scully sobbed quietly into 
the phone.  "I knew it."

"Mrs. Scully, I promise you I did everything I could."  
Mulder looked out of his window and saw a large, dark van 
parked across the street, with a shadowy figure in the 
driver's seat.  "I still am.  Everyone at the Bureau is 
working round the clock on this.  We'll find her, Mrs. 
Scully.  I promise."

"I know you're doing everything you can, Fox.  I know 
you'll find her.  You always have.  Fox .. " she sniffled 
loudly and cleared her throat.  "I know you're busy, but 
can we meet sometime?  I just, I would really like to talk 
with you."

"That would be great, Mrs. Scully.  In fact, I'd like to 
talk to you, too .. "  He was investigating the bottom of 
his phone for hidden wire taps.  "I don't think this line 
is secure.  Can I come visit you tomorrow evening?  Would 
that be all right?  We can go to dinner somewhere if you'd 
like."

"That sounds fine, Fox.  And don't worry, I'll make 
dinner."  Mulder smiled at that.  "Oh, and Fox?"

"Yes?"

"Call me Maggie, Fox."

"All right.  Maggie."  Mulder chuckled.  "See you tomorrow, 
then.  And Maggie, I promise you I'll find her."

"I know.  Good night, Fox."

Mulder hung up the line and rapidly redialed.  

"John Doggett."

"What the hell do you think you're doing, Agent Doggett?  I 
want to see a copy of the court order that gives you 
permission to tap my phone."

"What?  Who is this?"

"Oh, you have to ask.  How many agents are you surveilling, 
Doggett?  Is it really that difficult to remember all of 
us?"

"Ah.  Is this Agent Muldah?"

"Thank you, Agent Doggett, that's all I wanted to know.  
I'll have your ass for this."

Mulder yanked the phone cord out of the wall and hurled the 
entire assembly across the room, where it fell to the floor 
and sat, dinging pitifully.

Well, that was worthless, Mulder thought, and threw himself 
back onto the couch, narrowly missing the fish tank with 
his foot.

I have to get out of here, he thought.  I can't stand it 
here tonight.  I won't stay here, alone and powerless, to 
be spied on.

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

Mulder cracked open the door to Scully's apartment, half 
expecting her to come rushing from the bathroom, wrapped in 
a towel, demanding to know what he was doing here at that 
hour of night.  

But of course, Scully wasn't there; so Mulder stepped 
tentatively over the threshold, like a child tiptoeing into 
his parents' bedroom when they aren't home, locked the door 
behind him, and flipped on the lights.

Mulder hadn't consciously been heading for Scully's place 
when he left his apartment, but it must have been his 
unconscious destination; Scully's suitcase had ended 
up back in his car.  It made as good an excuse as any, he 
guessed; returning the things she'd taken with her to 
Oregon.  Of course, he didn't know where any of it 
belonged, and he didn't feel right poking around in her 
closet and drawers; so for now he carried it through her 
silent apartment to her room, and left the suitcase sitting 
at the foot of her bed.  Some of it should probably be 
aired out and washed, folded, and hung, he knew; but not 
now.  It can wait.

Mulder realized he was distracting himself with thoughts 
about her clothes, deliberately not noticing the empty 
apartment, the smell of absence, the lack of Scully.  Just 
as he'd done in her motel room two nights ago.  I have to 
face up to it, he thought.  I have to see for myself that 
she isn't here.  I need to internalize this and accept it. 
I won't be able to find her if I keep looking over my 
shoulder, expecting to see her there.

Mulder took off his overcoat and laid it over the back of 
Scully's green-and-white striped couch.  All right, he 
thought, let's start with this couch.  He caressed the back 
cushions with his hands.  I've sat on it many times, and 
slept here; I kissed her here once, and once I stopped her 
from kissing someone who wasn't really me.  

He almost smiled at the last memory; he could have laughed 
at it, now, if only Scully had been there.

Christ, Scully, I feel so *empty* without you, he thought,
and tears started to prick at the back of his eyes.  All 
right.  Next.

He walked to one of her tall floor plants and fingered the 
leaves.  He'd thought she was silly, for keeping plants; 
any that he tried to raise always ended up dead within a 
few months.  But then, she'd said the same thing about his 
fish ... 

How often do they need to be watered, Scully?  You told me 
once, but I don't remember.  I'll find out, Scully, and 
I'll water them for you.  

I could water them with my tears, he thought whimsically, 
and that was all it took.  He sat down at Scully's desk and 
cried, cried until his heart ached a little less and his 
eyes were raw and red, beating at the desk and sobbing deep 
in the back of his throat.

So that was why it took Mulder a little longer than it 
should have to comprehend that Scully's desk was empty, 
that he really wasn't supposed to have enough room there to 
cradle his head on his arms.

They took her computer, he realized, fingering the 
extension cord that came from the wall, powering nothing.  
I bet they took mine, too.  Well, that's certainly 
interesting.  But you know, I don't think I really care.

Slowly, Mulder eased himself to his feet and wandered back 
down the hall to her bedroom, steadying himself with one 
hand against the wall.  He'd never slept in Scully's bed 
before  she'd slept in his, yes, but never the other way 
around.  It hadn't occurred to him to notice that, before, 
and he wondered if it was significant for only a second 
before he lowered his head softly onto her pillow.  He felt 
a lump beneath the blankets and pulled out her pajamas, 
satin peach-colored drawstring pants and a matching 
buttoned top.  He held them to his face, and felt the soft 
satin on his cheek, and smelled Scully.  His breath 
hitched.

Mulder took off his shoes and belt and tie and burrowed 
deep under Scully's covers, feeling and smelling nothing 
but her.  And though it hurt, so much, to be this close to 
her and yet so very far away, there was a comforting 
presence in her apartment that would ease him to rest, that 
he knew he'd never find in his own rooms.

I'll find you, Scully, he repeated in his head like a 
mantra, just before he dropped off to sleep.  I promise.

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

Scully was in pain.  Terrible pain.  She was naked  God  
her body strapped down to a slab of rock.  In places the 
rock seemed almost to devour her alive.  She was in a dark 
place, very dark, but bright lights beat down from every 
direction, catching each nuance and fold of her skin, 
bringing the sharp waves of agony that coursed through her 
into sharp relief.  Oh, God, her wrists  there were poles 
going *through* her wrists, pinning her down to the slab, 
her hand scrabbling for a hold, for *anything*.  Mulder 
could see her, he could see everything, and  no, fuck, no 
 her face, her face was being held open and up by six long 
wires embedded in her cheeks, and her eyes, her eyes were 
streaming with tears, rolling frantically, desperately, 
agonized.  Mulder called her name and thought he saw her 
tense in recognition, but he couldn't hear his own voice, 
couldn't move, couldn't do anything but watch helplessly as 
the drill  God, the drill  moved relentlessly forward and 
entered her open mouth, whirring and whining and spinning 
and finally *buzzing*, and spray splattered everywhere and 
Scully *screamed* ... 

Somewhere in the distance, an alarm was going off.

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

Mulder's eyes shot open.  His chest was heaving, his body 
drenched in sweat.  He sat up and rubbed one hand through 
his hair, the other over his face.

A dream.  It was only a dream.  "Scully," he breathed out 
through dry lips.  It couldn't be true.  She was okay.  She 
had to be.

The phone rang.

Mulder jumped.

Without thinking, he stretched over the twisted, soaked 
sheets  testimony to his restless night  and lifted the 
handset from Scully's portable phone beside her bed.

"Scu-scully residence."  Mulder swallowed and licked his 
lips, willing himself to stop shaking, to be calm and 
collected.

"Hi, this is Nurse Owens calling from Dr. Parenti's office!  
Is Dana home?"

Dr. Parenti's - ? I thought that was over with  "Um, no, 
she, she isn't here right now.  Can I, uh, can I help you 
with something?"

"Well, the results of the tests she had done last week are 
in, and we have some good news!  Are you, by any chance  " 
there was a pause  "Fox Mulder?"

"Yeah, that's me."  Mulder swung his legs over the edge of 
the bed and massaged his forehead with his free hand.  Good 
news from Dr. Parenti's office?  She couldn't be  God, if 
she was  

"Dana's donor!  Good.  She's authorized us to release her 
information to you, Mr. Mulder, so if it's all right with 
you I'd like to leave her a detailed message."

"I, um .. " She's not here.  She's gone.  Mulder fumbled 
for a piece of paper and a pencil.  "All right.  Go ahead."

"Well, this was just a routine checkup, but both her blood 
and urine tests came back positive; so she needs to 
schedule her first prenatal visit  sometime within the 
next week would be best  "

"Wait, wait, whoa."  Mulder let himself fall back onto the 
bed and screwed his eyes shut.  "Are you saying Scully's 
*pregnant*?"

"Yes, exactly!  I'm so happy for both of you, Mr. Mulder; I 
know how much Dana hoped for this."

"Um.  Thank you."  Mulder tried to sound like a happy 
parent.  He rubbed the bridge of his nose with his middle 
finger.  "Um, but  she told me that the in vitro procedure 
didn't work.  How is this - ?"

"You must have made a baby the old-fashioned way, Mr. 
Mulder.  Congratulations!  Just have her phone the office 
as soon as possible, all right?"

Mulder breathed out slowly.  "Um.  All right.  Thank you, 
Nurse - ?"

"Owens.  Have a great day!"

"Yeah .. "

Mulder hung up the phone and let it drop next to him on the 
bed.  Pregnant.  Scully was pregnant.  With *his* child.  
He covered his face with his hands.

He had to find her.  Soon.  That's all there was to it.  If 
he waited, Scully could come back in any kind of condition, 
and if they found out she was pregnant, who knew what would 
happen to the child?  Damn, what if it wasn't even her they 
wanted, but the baby?  Mulder groaned.

"Agent Muldah, what are you doin' here?"

Mulder whipped around to face the bedroom door, immediately 
on the defensive.  "I could ask you the same thing, Agent 
Doggett.  First you tapped my phone, now you're following 
me!  Or are you just here to ransack Scully's apartment, 
like you did to my office!?"

Doggett didn't back down.  "Actually, I'm just doin' my 
job, followin' up a line of evidence that might help find 
her.  You may be able to shed some light on this, in fact."  
Doggett reached into his pocket.  "I heard voices.  What 
*are* you doin' here, Agent Muldah?"

"I, uh .. "  Mulder wiped a hand across his eyes, suddenly 
very conscious of the rumpled, sweat-encrusted dress shirt 
and slacks he hadn't gotten around to removing the night 
before.  "I came by to drop off her travel bag, from 
Oregon."  He indicated the suitcase at the foot of the bed.

"I see, and you were so tired you just decided to lie down 
and take a nap."  Doggett sounded amused.  What an arrogant 
*bastard,* Mulder thought.

... Fuck it.

He sat back down on the bed, deflated, and cradled his head 
in his hands.  "I miss her, Agent Doggett," he said softly.

Doggett blinked.  Of all the possible responses he might 
have expected from Mulder, this quiet, forlorn desperation 
wasn't one of them.  He walked around the bed and squatted 
down next to Mulder's bent form.

"Agent Muldah?  My job is to find her.  I'm gonna do that.  
Whatever you may believe my motives are here, all I wanna 
do is find Agent Scully and bring her back."

Mulder cleared his throat and breathed in loudly, and 
leaned back over the bed, stretching his back and neck 
muscles.  His eyes were closed, his nose red.  "If that's 
true, Agent Doggett, then I'm more sure than ever that 
you're being used."  He wiped his nose and blinked, then 
met Doggett's steady, concerned gaze.  "But that can wait.  
What did you want to show me?"

Doggett pulled a scrap of paper from his pocket and handed 
it to Mulder.  It was an appointment notice for Scully from 
Dr. Parenti's office.  "You know anything about this?"

"Where'd you find this?"

"Sittin' on a shelf in the X-Files office.  She must've 
left it there."

Mulder sighed, and tugged at his lower lip.  "Yeah, I know 
about this.  Scully was  well, you've read her file, 
surely you know that she was left barren when her cancer 
went into remission.  Recently she learned that she might 
be able to conceive, after all, and she  " Mulder 
hesitated.  Just say it, he thought; it's all going to come 
out anyway, and better it be sooner  "well, *we*, I should 
say  we were working with this Dr. Parenti," he waved the 
paper in Doggett's direction, "to try and help Scully have 
a baby."

Doggett eyed Mulder warily.  "I'm surprised you're willin' 
to tell me all this, Agent Muldah.  Thank you for bein' 
candid.  .... I presume the treatment didn't work?"

"We thought it didn't.  But that's why I had no choice but 
to tell you about it, Agent Doggett; it's suddenly 
relevant."  Mulder sighed again, more deeply.  "That call 
you heard me take?  It was from Dr. Parenti's office.  
Scully's pregnant."

The two men's eyes met over the top of the paper, tired 
hazel into shocked blue.

"We have to hurry," Doggett said hoarsely.

"Yeah,"  Mulder answered.  "We do."

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

Mulder stood up, carrying his plate from the table to the 
kitchen sink.  "Thank you for dinner, Maggie; I really 
appreciate this.  It was wonderful."

"It's the least I could do, Fox," Maggie joined him with 
some more dishes, smiling sadly.  "You're working so hard 
all day to find Dana, and at the same time I know you miss 
her as much as I do."  She put an arm around Mulder's back 
and looked up at him.  "I'm so glad she has a friend like 
you looking after her at the FBI."

Mulder answered her with an equally sad smile.  "Maggie, 
more often than not, *she* looks after *me*."

Maggie stepped away, nodding.  "You're good for each other.  
I've always thought so."

Mulder leaned against the counter and reached into his 
pocket.  "Maggie, I need to get back to work soon, but 
there's something I wanted to ask you."  He pulled out 
Scully's necklace  he'd thought it might be inappropriate 
to actually *wear* it to her mother's house  and held it 
out to her.  "I found this again."

Maggie nodded slowly, and reached out with one finger to 
touch the tiny cross.  She pulled her hand back quickly, 
blinking away tears, and glanced up at him.  "I want you to 
keep it again, Fox.  Give it back when you find her."

He nodded.  "I will.  But that isn't what I wanted to ask 
you, Maggie.  This is  this is the third time Dana's been 
taken.  Every time, I've found this necklace left behind.  
I was just  I was starting to wonder if there's anything 
special about it.  It seems like too much of a coincidence 
that the clasp just came undone  three times  when I've 
never seen it fall off her neck.  Can  can you tell me 
anything interesting about this necklace, any special 
properties it's supposed to have, a particular store it was 
purchased from, anything at all?"

Maggie frowned.  "Well, no, as far as I'm aware it's just a 
plain, 14-carat-gold cross necklace.  As for where I bought 
it, that would have been  hmm  we were living on the base 
in California at the time, and I'm sure it was just a chain 
jewelry store at the nearest mall."  She shook her head.  
"I'm sorry, I can't ... well, wait here a minute."

Maggie left the room and went upstairs.  In the meantime, 
Mulder put his hands to his temples.  He was starting to 
get a pounding headache.  He hoped it would go away on its
own, and he hoped it was just a stress headache; he wasn't
up to dealing with anything else right now.

When Maggie came back into the kitchen, she was carrying a 
long velvet-covered jewelry box.  "When Melissa died  " 
she put her hand to her mouth and closed her eyes, choking 
on a sob.  "I'm sorry, Fox, I'm just so worried for Dana; 
everything's coming back .. "

Mulder took her hand and held it, concerned, headache 
forgotten.  "I understand, Maggie.  It's all right."

Maggie nodded and swallowed sharply.  "Thank you, Fox."  

She held to him tightly for a long moment.  Then with a
deep breath, Maggie reclaimed her hand and wiped her
eyes, smiling at him sadly.  Mulder nodded back slowly, 
understanding.  

Another brief moment to collect herself, and Maggie
opened the container.  

"This was Melissa's.  She hadn't worn the necklace for a
few years, and when I was going through her things, I
found it in the original box.  There might have been some 
information underneath ... "  She pried up the velvet-
covered cardboard on which the necklace rested, and pulled 
out a folded sheet of thin paper.  "Ah-hah!  I thought so!  
Well, there you have it, Fox; that's all I know."

Mulder took the sheet from her and unfolded it, smoothing 
out the creases.  "'This pure gold cross serves as a 
reminder of God's eternal love, for our Lord and Savior' 
... yadda yadda yadda ... 'the tiny sliver of lodestone in 
its heart will steer you on God's course as you navigate 
the turbulent seas of life.'  ... Lodestone?"

Maggie shook her head.  "I never knew.  They must not have 
advertised that."

"Lodestone, like a compass, that's, that's iron, magnetic
iron, magnetite.  Hmm."

"Does that mean something to you?"

"No, no it doesn't.  Hmm.  Maggie, do you mind if I keep 
this?"  Mulder's cell phone rang.  "Excuse me."  Maggie 
nodded and went back to the dishes.

"Mulder."

"Mulder, it's us."  It was Frohike.  "Can you get over here 
right away?"

"I'm on my way.  What've you got?"

"Don't want to discuss it on the phone.  See you when you 
get here."  He cut the connection.   

"That was a lead, Maggie; I need to get going.  May I?" 
Mulder indicated the paper from Melissa's necklace.

"Of course, Fox.  In fact .. I want you to take the box and 
necklace, too."

"Maggie, no.  I couldn't."

"It's been on my dresser for five years, Fox; I'm not going 
to do anything with it.  And when you give Dana's back to 
her, you may find that you miss the comfort of having it."  
Maggie looked knowingly at Mulder, and he smiled sheepishly 
back; because of course she was right, as soon as he got 
back in the car to leave, Scully's necklace would be right 
back under his own collar.  He didn't have the heart to 
tell her that any comfort he derived from it came from 
knowing that it was Scully's, and not from any religious 
power watching over him.  

"All right, Maggie."  He took the box from her.  "Thank 
you.  Thank you for everything."

"Fox, Dana's my only daughter now, but in many ways you're 
like a son to me."  Maggie's lower lip trembled as she 
reached out to give him a hug.  "Be careful."

Surprised, Mulder hugged her back.  "I will.  And I'll let 
you know if we find anything.  Anything at all."

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

Byers let Mulder into their office.  "What've you got for 
me, guys?" he asked, stepping around tables cluttered with
electronics and piles of back issues.

"Well, first of all," said Frohike, "we got the dirt on 
Agent Doggett."

"We knew you weren't likely to look him up on your own," 
Byers added.

"Yeah.  That's the sort of thing Scully does," Langly put 
in.

The room went silent.

"Er.  Yeah," Langly cleared his throat.  "So.  Agent 
Doggett."

"What kind of dirt?" Mulder asked.

"Well," Frohike said.  "None, actually.  He's an 
ex-marine.  Served with the NYPD for awhile after his 
discharge.  Quantico grad with honors.  Divorced."  He 
shrugged.

"He seems pretty clean," Langly added.  "I dunno, Mulder; 
you might be overly paranoid on this one."

"Coming from you guys, that says a lot," Mulder tried to 
smile, then rubbed his forehead again.  The headache was 
getting worse.  "I talked with him for awhile this morning; 
I'm starting to think he'll work out ok.  I'm just afraid 
someone's pulling his strings.  And of course he isn't 
looking for her in the right places."

Byers nodded seriously.  "We'll check into that."

"All right."  Mulder screwed his eyes shut against the 
pain.  Dammit, go away, he muttered to the headache.  "What 
else have you guys got?"

"Voila!" Langly flourished a large map of the United 
States, with little dots of red marker congregated in the 
southwestern states.  "We got your UFO activity right here, 
G-Man."

"This is all from the same ship?" Mulder asked, leaning 
over the map.

"Well, we see a clear trail of activity leading from Oregon 
right down the to Arizona desert.  No reason to suspect 
otherwise," said Byers.

"If she's on that ship, she's there," Frohike said, 
pointing.

"How about  um."  Mulder was having a hard time 
concentrating.  "The abductees.  Are they all multiples?"

"Seem to be," Langly answered.  "That's one thing, though; 
many of the abductees show signs of abnormal brain 
activity."

"Like you did, a year ago," said Byers.

"Yeah.  That's strange," Frohike added.  "You weren't 
abducted."

"I'm not an abductee," Mulder muttered.

The guys exchanged glances.  "How sure are you of that, 
Mulder?" asked Byers.

Mulder looked up, painfully.  "Pretty damn.  Why?  You know 
some " 

His cell phone rang.  He nodded apologetically and opened 
it.

"Mulder. .. What?  Agent Scully?  ... I'll be right there."

Mulder replaced the phone in his pocket.  With one hand to 
his temple, eyes closed, he said, "That was A.D. Skinner.  
Two hours ago, someone entered the FBI using Scully's 
keycard, and removed something  as yet, exactly what is 
unknown  from the evidence room."

"Mulder  are you all right?" asked Byers.

"Yeah, I'm .. I'm fine." Mulder went on in a monotone, eyes 
still closed, thinking rapidly.  "It's not her.  It's the 
bounty hunter.  He took our computers, too.  Doggett knows 
that the computers are missing.  They're disposing of 
evidence.  They're taking abductees.  Plausible 
deniability.  They're looking for proof, proof that they 
exist, so they can destroy it.  They're taking people like 
me  I don't know why they didn't take me." His voice 
broke.  "I know what they want.  They want Gibson Praise.  
He's in Arizona."

Mulder opened his eyes and looked at the Gunmen.  "We have 
to  nnnnggggh!"  Mulder felt as though a spear had pierced 
his skull.  He slid to the floor, pressing his head between
his hands.  "Scully!"  He could see her again, in flashes, 
still strapped to the slab, and slowly, slowly, a saw came 
down towards her chest  "aauuggghh!"  more pain, right 
behind his eyes  more for Scully too as the saw drew near 
and they screamed together, anguished, and then, blissfully,
there was nothing.

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

When Skinner stopped by to see him late the next morning, 
Mulder was staring out the window of his hospital room and 
brooding on mortality.  His parents and sister, Scully's 
father and sister, Scully's impending death, his own, their 
child's.  It shouldn't have to end, he thought.  There are 
things that just  should last forever.  He fingered 
Scully's cross, which they'd returned to him that morning 
at his insistence, and wondered if he'd see her again.  How 
many obstacles can you avoid, he thought, until finally one 
comes along and you say, enough, I'm done, this is the end, 
take me? 

Scully, if you come back and I'm gone, will you forgive me 
for not being strong enough?  Can you understand why I 
didn't tell you?  Will you tell our  our son, our 
daughter  all about me?  Will you teach him to grow up to
be a better man than I was? 

There was a plot waiting for him, next to his mother's and 
father's, and a tombstone on order that already had the 
final date engraved.  This year.  There's not enough time, 
he thought.  There's never been enough time.  I don't have 
enough time.

I don't want to leave you, Scully.  Not like this.  Not 
now.  It isn't right.  I need to see you again.  I need 
*you* to see *me*.  I need to know you forgive me.  I guess 
I need to know you love me.

I only want to see you.  I only want to hold your hand.  
That's all I ask.  One last time.

Scully, I'll do it.  Somehow, I will try.  I will be here 
for you when you get back, and I will do everything within 
my power to hasten that day.  I promise.  I will.

Scully, I can't bear any of this alone ...  

"Mulder?"

He didn't realize there were tears pouring down his face 
until he heard Skinner's voice in the doorway.  "Sir," he 
smiled shakily and wiped his face on his sleeve.  "Sit 
down.  I was just  thinking."

"I see that."  Skinner sat.  "Mulder, are you all right?  
I've never seen you cry like this."

"Yeah, I'm  " Mulder nodded in Skinner's direction.  
"How's the investigation going?"

Skinner eyed Mulder skeptically, but accepted it for the 
moment.  "We're following up your lead on Gibson Praise.  
Turns out his file is the only thing missing from the 
evidence room.  Doggett's got a team down there right 
now; the Gunmen are with him.  I'm catching a flight to 
join them in two hours."

"If we're going to find her any time soon, it'll be there, 
sir."

Skinner nodded.  

"Book me a flight, too," Mulder hazarded.

"No way.  I need you here, getting better.  You're not 
going *anywhere* until your doctor says it's okay."

Mulder looked away.  That wasn't likely to happen, at least 
not in time to help Scully.  He took a deep breath and 
looked Skinner in the eye.

"Sir, my doctor is currently on board a UFO somewhere in 
the Arizona desert.  When I find her, I'll be sure to ask 
if it's all right for me to leave this bed."

"Mulder  "

"Sir, listen.  You need me down there.  Doggett's fine, 
he's competent, but he doesn't have any idea what he's 
dealing with.  The guys are okay, but they have very little 
field experience. You  you haven't seen it, sir.  Whatever 
beliefs you have, are through me.  I'm the only one that 
can do this.  I'm Scully's best chance.  Sir, you need me.  
Regardless of what my medical charts say, I am feeling 
fine.  I have to do this, sir."

Skinner broke the gaze first.  "All right, Mulder, you win.  
I'll book you a seat.  But you be careful."

Mulder smiled, remembering Maggie.  "I promise I will, sir.  
I've already promised."

For a few minutes, charged silence seemed to hang in the 
room like an oppressive cloud; then both men began to speak 
at once.

"You go first, sir."

Skinner nodded slowly.  "Smoking Man's dead.  Someone 
pushed his wheelchair down a flight of stairs."

Mulder turned back to the window, unsurprised.  "Krycek."

"How do you figure *that*?"

"I ran into him in Bellefleur.  He said he wanted to see 
the bastard dead."

"Well, we'll never prove it."

"No."

After a moment, Skinner stood up to go.  "Mulder, I "

"Sir, there's something I need to tell you."

Skinner bit his lip.  "I already know.  Doggett told me.  
We'll find her in time, Mulder; we don't have a choice."

"Doggett told you ..?"  Mulder raised an eyebrow, confused.

"Scully's pregnancy ... ?"

"Oh, that."  Mulder sighed heavily.  "Yeah, you need to 
know that, too.  But there's something else.  And I'd  I'd 
appreciate it if you keep it quiet for awhile."

Skinner waited expectantly.

Mulder looked down at his hands, the window, the door, 
anywhere but Skinner.  "Sir, I never fully recovered from 
the abnormal brain activity I suffered a year ago."  
Holding his breath, he looked up to meet Skinner's eyes.

Skinner looked guarded, uncomprehending.  "What are you 
trying to say, Mulder?"

Mulder sighed.  "Sir, my  my brain is still functioning 
too quickly for my body.  It's not to the degree that it 
was when I was institutionalized  I can't hear thoughts,
 and except when it gets really bad  like last night 
I can think more clearly than most people.  I've been 
taking medicine for a year, to control it, and going 
to doctors, but unless something happens to reverse it  " 
he shook his head.  "I only have a few months to live. At 
most.  Sir."

He glanced up at Skinner, whose face was registering shock 
and dismay.

Mulder looked at his hands.  "I never told Scully," he 
whispered, his throat tight.

"Oh .. Mulder,"  Skinner rasped out.  He shook his head.  
"I can't believe that.  We'll find something.  There has to 
be a way  "

Mulder looked at Skinner in defeat.  "There isn't, sir.  
Believe me.  I've tried everything.  And you know me, that 
really means *everything*."  He smiled wryly.  "But you see 
why I need to go, sir.  I have to see Scully again.  I 
*have* to.  And I need someone  you  to know just what it 
is that I'm fighting."

"Mulder,"  Skinner leaned forward and put his hands on 
Mulder's, stilling their nervous kneading of the bedsheets.  
*He* was the one about to cry, now.  "I'll keep this to 
myself.  Thank you  thank you for telling me."  He 
squeezed Mulder's hands.  "You sit tight.  I'll be back in 
an hour, to get you on the plane."  He stood up and wiped 
his eyes, started to say something else, then headed for 
the door.

"Sir?" Mulder asked.

"Yeah?"  Skinner spun around on the threshold.

"On your way back over here, can you pick me up some 
sunflower seeds?"

Skinner's laugh turned into a sob.  "Of course  of course 
I will."  And he was gone.

Mulder pulled his knees to his chest and rested his head on 
his arms.  I'm coming, Scully.  One way or another, I'm 
coming.

Slowly, creakily, he pulled himself out of bed and began to 
dress for work.

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

The school for the deaf was turning into a circus, Mulder 
thought.  Agents everywhere, confused teachers, photos of 
Gibson strewn on the floor.  He braced his arm against a 
wall and rested his head in the crook of his elbow, 
swallowing dryly.  The heat wasn't doing anything for his 
headache.

He felt a tentative hand on his shoulder and looked up.  It 
was Skinner.  "Mulder, if you need to rest ..." he said in 
a low voice.

Mulder wiped a hand across his eyes and shook his head.  
"No, I'm fine.  I'll be fine.  Any sign of Gibson?"  He 
squared his shoulders, pushing aside the momentary 
weakness.

Skinner's forehead creased, and Mulder let himself be led 
to one of the child-sized chairs in the middle of the 
classroom.  "I don't think you're fine, Mulder.  I want you 
to be careful."

"Dammit, you're not responsible for me!  I'm FINE!"  Mulder 
leapt to his feet, eyes flashing.  He aimed a kick at the 
small desk, harder than he intended, sending it flying 
across the room and into the blackboard with a resounding 
crash.

After a moment of clenching and unclenching his jaw and his 
fists, Mulder shoved his hands in his pockets and looked 
hoodedly at Skinner.  "I'm fine, sir," he said quietly.  
"Don't treat me like an invalid.  I'm not.  What about 
Gibson?"

Skinner righted the mistreated desk and sat on top of it, 
sighing.  He shook his head, lips tight.  "No sign of him.  
He was definitely in class, right here.  We've got the 
whole school gathered on the lawn and all the teachers are 
being questioned.  No one saw him leave, so far."

Mulder sighed, letting out a "whoosh" of air.  "We can't be 
too late.  We can't be."

Skinner opened his lips as if to answer, when Agent Doggett 
poked his head in the door.  "Sir, can you come out here 
for a second?"  Doggett looked cagily at Mulder but didn't 
include him in the invitation.  

Skinner smiled tightly at Mulder and followed the other 
agent out, closing the door behind him.  

Mulder stared at the closed door, then folded back into his 
chair and covered his face with his hands, rubbing at his 
temples again.  Of course Skinner didn't believe him.  
Mulder never believed Scully, either, when she used that 
line.  A small, impotent cry leaked from his throat.

Mulder stood up and began to pace across the classroom.  
I'm supposed to be able to solve this, he thought.  This is 
my job; I find people missing under impossible 
circumstances every day.  Think.  I can do this.  

He reached the window and tightly gripped the sill, staring 
sightlessly out at the desert.  Not without Scully.  Not 
anymore.

He gritted his teeth and wiped that thought away.  His hand 
migrated again to the cross at his throat.  Stop it, he 
thought to himself.  Stop wallowing.  You'll never find her 
if you don't believe you can.

Mulder took a deep breath and stood up straighter.  He 
closed his eyes, and when he opened them again, he saw a 
sudden movement in the oppressively still desert.  A quick 
motion, a flash of color, a shimmering in the air - he 
leaned forward and squinted, senses on the alert, self-
doubt forgotten.

The door opened again and Doggett entered behind him.  
"Muldah, I don't wanna do this, but I gotta ask.  ... What 
the hell are we doin' here?  There's nothin' but a scared 
kid who ran off when he saw the feds were after 'im.  
There's no Agent Scully, there's no kidnappers - there's no 
*aliens*, Agent Muldah."

Doggett eyed Mulder warily, who was still focused intently 
on the desert.  "Muldah, could she have known about this 
baby already?  'Cause she ain't *here*, Muldah.  She ain't 
gonna *be* here.  If she knew she was pregnant, she mighta 
been scared, she mighta gone -"

Mulder turned to Doggett and shoved a finger into his 
chest.  "No way."  He glanced out the window again.  "I 
gotta go."

Mulder ran out the door, leaving a consternated Doggett 
behind, shaking his head.

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

Mulder rounded the top of the next hill and saw them.  Only 
a few hundred yards in front of him - a small figure, and a 
taller, petite one with red hair, wearing a pantsuit.  
Gibson - and Scully.

It's not Scully, you idiot, he tried to tell himself.  
After so many days without Scully, just seeing her was like 
a potent drug, enough to wipe all of that out of his mind.  
He knew it wasn't Scully, but *oh*, how he wanted to 
believe it could really be her.

His breath caught in his throat as he continued down the 
far side of the escarpment.  He could almost imagine he was 
watching Scully and their son, walking calmly down the 
beach in Martha's Vineyard on vacation, pointing out pretty 
shells and seagulls to each other as they waited for Mulder 
to catch up.

He rubbed at his eyes, and gave his head a firm shake.  No.  
Stop it.  If you ever want that to happen, get a grip on 
yourself, Mulder.

Gibson turned around, wide-eyed, still trying frantically 
to free himself from Scully's grip.  He shook his head 
frantically at Mulder, who ignored him and ran forward, 
crying out Scully's name.

She stopped and turned around, never shifting her hold on 
Gibson.  

Mulder slowed and halted in front of them.  "Scully .. ?" 
he asked uncertainly.  

A searing pain shot through Mulder's mind and he distinctly 
heard Gibson shouting "It isn't her!"

Mulder put a hand to his forehead and breathed deeply, 
willing the pain away by sheer force.  I know, he thought, 
hoping Gibson could understand.  I know.  Ow.  Geez.  I 
know it's not her.

Gibson bit his lip and stopped struggling.

Raising his head again, Mulder turned back to Scully.  "Let 
Gibson go," he said.  "You're surrounded.  You can't get 
away.  We'll take you someplace where you can get help." 
Hopefully the bounty hunter didn't realize Mulder was 
on to him.  "Now just let him go."

Neither of them moved.

Slowly, Mulder pulled out his gun.  His arm was shaking, 
but he steadied it with a two-handed grip.  All he could 
think about was a warehouse in DC, and Scully's lifeless 
body collapsing in front of him, a gun in his own hand.  He 
made a conscious effort to keep his voice even when he 
spoke.  

"Let him go."  Mulder's eyes were desperate and dangerous - 
or simply scared.  "I'll shoot.  You know I will."

Please let her do what I say.  I don't think I can do this.  
I can't shoot Scully.  No matter what, I can't shoot 
Scully.  Please, please, just let him go ... 

But his hands and face didn't waver.  "Let him go, Scully."

Slowly - thank God - her fingers loosened around Gibson's 
arm.  As soon as he could move freely, the boy turned and 
fled into the desert.  He glanced back once in trepidation, 
but Mulder wasn't watching.

"Okay,"  Mulder said, trying not to shake in relief.  
"Good.  Now just come over here, and we'll get you home, 
Scully."

She took a step backwards.

What the -?  "Scully, that's the wrong way."  He tightened 
his resolve and his grip on the weapon.  "Walk *towards* 
me."

She kept walking backwards, step after step, faster now.

Mulder glanced quickly behind her, and his eyes widened.  
"Watch your step!  Scully, stop!  The cliff - "  He dropped 
his gun and ran to her, reason forgotten.

Too late.  She took a final step, and just as he reached 
her side, tumbled gracefully, almost swooning, over the 
edge.

"Nooo!" Mulder shouted.  He fell to his hands and knees at 
the edge of the precipice, watching as her lithe, small 
form crumpled into a heap at the base, a hundred feet 
below.  Oh my God, Scully, no .. it can't be.  He blinked 
away tears.  Of course it isn't.  It isn't her.  It isn't 
her it isn't her it isn't her itisntheritisnther ... 

He knew it wasn't her.  He also knew he'd be watching 
Scully fall off that cliff in dreams for the rest of his 
life - no matter how short the rest of his life turned out 
to be.

Oh, God, Scully.  He rocked back on his heels, wracked with 
dry sobs.  I'm so sorry.

He felt a presence behind him, and there was Byers, looking 
stricken.  The rest of the Gunmen and the search team were 
right behind.  Skinner picked Mulder's gun up off the 
ground and silently handed it back to him.  Doggett walked 
to the edge, and peered over at Scully's still form.  He 
glanced at Mulder, swallowing, and rasped out, "We were 
right behind you, Muldah, but we couldn't get here in 
time."  He kicked a loose stone over the cliff.  "Muldah, 
I'm so sorry, I - "

Mulder just looked a him with bright, tortured eyes, and 
said nothing.

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

Mulder stared at the base of the cliff, eyes locked on the 
small depression in the sand where Scully  not Scully.  
Where not-Scully had landed when she  it.  When it had 
stepped backwards off the hundred-foot-high cliff and 
plummeted to her death.  Not to its death.  Where it had 
stood up and walked away, faded away into the desert.

A pretty tableau they made, standing in the fading sanguine 
twilight of the desert.  Mulder was slowly collapsing in on 
himself, as he stood perfectly still, arms crossed tightly 
over his chest, gazing greyly at the sand beneath him.  The 
Gunmen stood to the side, huddled together, conversing 
among themselves in fits and starts.  Doggett's men milled 
confusedly around the rented SUV.  The man himself was 
staring perplexedly into the distance, hands on hips, eyes 
following the track left by the suspect until the sandy 
ground gave over to gravel.  Skinner's forehead creased as 
he glanced from Mulder to Doggett and back again.

A cool breeze ruffled Mulder's hair, flapped the too-loose 
tail of his t-shirt, made him clasp his elbows more tightly 
to his body.  Freeze, he thought.  Pause.  Stop now.  I 
want to get off.

"I don't get it," Doggett walked over to Mulder, gesturing.  
"I mean, I've seen people live through a lot of dangerous 
shit.  I'll buy she survived the fall.  But got up and 
walked away?  *Ran* away, accordin' to the tracks?  What 
the hell's goin' on here?"

Mulder slowly raised his head and looked Doggett in the 
eye.  "It's not her, Agent Doggett."

"I know what Agent Scully looks like, Agent Muldah.  And 
that was Agent Scully."

Mulder just shook his head distractedly and turned away, 
taking a few steps in Skinner's direction.  

Doggett waved his arms in consternation and followed.  
"What are you trying to get at, Muldah?  If it ain't her, 
who is it?  If that weren't her, where is she?  Muldah?!?"

Mulder turned to Doggett and skewered him with a look.  
"You don't want to hear what I think."

Doggett blinked, but he recovered quickly.  "Agent Muldah, 
look.  I *do* want to hear.  If it can help find Agent 
Scully, I *gotta* hear it.  I don't know *what* you think 
I'm doin' here, but I'm not a spy, and I'm not tryin' to 
cover up anythin' - I am here just like you - to *solve* 
this!"  He narrowed his eyes at Mulder.  "Now you tell me 
what really happened up there, Agent Muldah, or I'll hafta 
arrest you for withholdin' evidence." 

Mulder put his hand to his forehead again, covering his 
eyes and rubbing his temples.  The headache was back again,
and he suddenly had a memory of Scully saying those exact 
words, outside of a hospital in Bellefleur on their first 
case.  They keep sending me spies who don't realize 
they're spies.

God, I'm paranoid.  Scully ... -

Mulder looked back up at Doggett, a glint of humor in his 
grief-darkened eyes, a tiny smile trying to form at the 
corner of his mouth.  He said it naturally.  "It's a shape-
shifting alien bounty hunter."  Of course it is.  What else 
would it be?

Doggett gaped.  Mulder smirked and turned away again.  
Skinner rolled his eyes.

One of Doggett's agents shouted "Sir!" and pointed to a 
figure mostly obscured in the sparse brush just ahead of 
their position.  Mulder whipped around and had his gun out 
and aimed before any of the other agents had started to 
think about reacting.

He aimed for the left shoulder - just in case.  He felt the 
scar on his chest tingle where she'd shot him years ago as 
he pulled the trigger.

She kept coming.  Her blood oozed green.

The second time, he aimed for the neck.

Mulder calmly replaced his gun in the holster as she fell.  
He held himself calmly, tightly composed, as all the other 
agents and the Gunmen stared, shocked, between him and 
Scully's body.

Doggett recovered first and ran to her side.  As he knelt 
at her head, her body began to writhe and bubble; her face 
collapsed in on itself and became a fluorescent green mass, 
and the rest of her body quickly followed suit, sputtering 
and roiling and dissolving itself away, finally, into 
nothingness.

Doggett looked at Mulder, slack-jawed and wide-eyed.  So 
did everyone else, for that matter; even the Gunmen.

"Well,"  Mulder shook his arms out and glanced casually 
around at the sea of shocked faces, as though shooting an 
alien who looked like his partner was something he did 
every day, and announced calmly,  "I'm going to find 
Gibson."  

He strode out of the canyon and into the darkening night.

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

Mulder walked west, toward the sunset, until the light had 
faded and the stars were out and he couldn't walk any more.  
He didn't think about anything; just put one foot in front 
of the other.

When he finally stopped and sat on the ground, his back 
against a large rock, he couldn't keep the thoughts out.  
He'd shot Scully.  He hadn't thought he was capable, but 
he'd done it, with his own hands, he'd shot his partner.  
He'd shot and killed the woman he loved.  He looked at his 
hands, spread out in front of him, pale in the starlight.  
They shook in grief and despair and self-loathing; and even 
the starlight, the light that had been a comfort to him 
since he'd realized Samantha resided there, seemed 
accusing.  He could imagine Sam saying in a bratty little-
sister voice, "You failed her, too, Fox!" and flouncing 
away.

Even as he'd pulled the trigger, he'd known it wasn't 
Scully; but that knowledge couldn't soothe him as he sat, 
shaking from head to toe.  He was capable of shooting 
Scully, what kind of a monster did that make him?  If he 
could shoot her today he could shoot her any time.  All he 
had to do was convince himself that she was an alien and 
he'd do it.

He moaned and clasped his hands around his head.  How can 
this be me? he thought.  I can't - I could never hurt 
Scully.  I love her.  I love you, Scully!

It can't be.  It can't be me.

I fucking SHOT her!!

Mulder's breath came in short gasps as he rocked back and 
forth.  He couldn't stop shaking.  He took out his gun and 
held it loosely in his hands, between his knees, and it 
shook wildly along with the rest of him.  I'll end it, he 
thought.  Right here, I can stop this.  I'll be dead soon 
anyway.  It'll be clean and quick.  They might never even 
find me.  I don't want to be the sort of man who'd shoot 
Scully, good, well, I won't be.  I'll never hurt her again.

If I shoot myself, I'll never find her.

I'll never find her anyway.  She's gone.  They aren't 
coming back this time and it's too late.  Even if she does 
come back, I'll already be dead.

Mulder leaned his clammy forehead against the cool barrel 
of the gun, still shaking uncontrollably, still sobbing 
disjointedly.  Scully, I'm so sorry ... 

From this angle, head down, all he could see was Scully's 
cross against his chest.

He couldn't do it.

/Stop it, Mulder.  Stop it!/

He dropped the gun as though it were a red-hot brand, and 
with one final, wracking shudder, his shaking calmed and 
stilled.  Scully ... ?

/Stop it, Mulder.  You did what you had to.  I believe in 
you.  I know I'll see you again.  I love you, Mulder ... /

Scully, I'm so sorry ... 

/No apologies, G-Man./  He could hear her smile.  He could 
feel her cool fingers against his forehead, smoothing his 
hair.  /You can't get away from me that easily, Mulder./

Apparently not.  Mulder smiled, though he was crying openly 
now.  You'll have to shoot me yourself if you want me out 
of your hair, Scully.

/I'll keep it under advisement.  Just remember, Mulder, 
*I*'m the only one who gets to shoot you.  Deal?/

Yeah.  He laughed brokenly.  Deal.  Scully, will you come 
back to me?

/Mulder, I will.  I know I will.  ... Mulder, we're leaving 
now.  Don't give up ... /

"Scully!"  Mulder shouted and raised his head.

Gibson was sitting next to him.  "I heard you in my head," 
he said by way of explanation.

Oh, no, Mulder thought.  He'd been thinking such dark 
thoughts .. 

"It's okay," Gibson shoved his glasses farther up his nose.  
"I don't mind.  I wanted to help you, so I brought her 
here."

"Scully?  You brought Scully here?"  Mulder latched his 
hand onto Gibson's shoulder and looked at him intently.  
"Where is she?"

"I brought her in my head," Gibson answered calmly.  "I 
helped her talk to you.  She hurts, but she didn't want to 
tell you that."

That was real, Mulder thought wonderingly.  That was really 
Scully.

"Does that mean they're gone now?"

"Yeah," Gibson answered.  "They had to go.  They're late."

"For what?  You can read their thoughts?"

"I don't know.  They're just late.  And yeah - I can.  Not 
as easily as yours, but I can."

"Okay.  ... But what about you?"

"They couldn't stay long enough to try again." Gibson 
shrugged.  "They don't need me that badly, I guess.  I 
don't know."

Mulder didn't answer, and the two of them sat in silence 
for awhile.  Mulder looked at the stars and picked out 
Orion, Cassiopeia, the Big Dipper.  Scully had promised 
that she would be back.  He would have to hang on to that.  
It could keep him going for a long time, that tiny shred of 
hope.  A last word from Scully that he hadn't dared hope to 
receive.

She said she loves me, too.

"Gibson," Mulder said, breaking the quiet.  Gibson turned 
and faced him, though Mulder knew he could pick the rest of 
the sentence out of his mind, if he wanted.

"Thank you.  You saved my life tonight."

Gibson blinked behind his thick glasses.  "It's okay, 
Mulder.  I like you."

Mulder smiled and put his arm around Gibson, pulling him 
near.  Almost like father and son.

Mulder had his eyes on the stars, thinking about Scully, 
when the helicopter landed, bringing Skinner, Doggett, and 
a medical team.

X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X

Two days later, Mulder was back in the same hospital room.  
They said he'd be able to leave that afternoon - his 
neurologist was not pleased with him for going to Arizona, 
but he was prescribing a stronger dose of medication that 
should let Mulder go back to work - for real - within the 
next week.

Mulder supposed he should be happy about that - at least 
he'd spend his final days working, not strapped to a bed in 
an institution.  But he still didn't want to face his 
basement office alone.  He hadn't been back since he'd 
found Doggett's men searching it, and the thought of taking 
an actual case, without Scully - without even the 
possibility of calling her in the evenings - wasn't really 
something he could conceive of doing, ever again.

Mulder looked up at a knock on his door.  "Come in," he 
called, expecting Skinner.

It was Agent Doggett.

"How're you doin'?" Doggett asked, looking concerned.

"I'm fine," Mulder answered, keeping his eyes hard.  "What 
are you doing here, Agent Doggett?"

"Well, uh ... " Doggett fidgeted.  "I thought you'd want to 
know a few things.  Gibson Praise is right now a ward of 
the state, but I asked for special protections, as I 
assumed you would yourself.  What remained of .. Agent 
Scully -" Doggett looked warily at Mulder - "was 
unidentifiable.  And, uh .. the case has been shelved, 
pending further leads."

"I could have guessed all of that, Agent Doggett.  Why are 
you *really* here?"

Doggett looked at Mulder, a pinched expression on his face.  
"You were right, Muldah.  Kersh promised me a promotion if 
I solved this, but he never wanted me to.  I defended our 
actions to him, not two hours ago, and- "  Doggett raised 
an eyebrow.  "He's assigned me to the X-Files, Agent 
Muldah."

Mulder let out a breath he'd forgotten he was holding.  
"No way.  I work with Scully or I work with no one."

"Muldah, I don't think we have a choice on this."

Mulder shifted higher in bed, raising himself up.  "They're 
putting an official seal on her disappearance.  I won't 
stand for it."  His voice was tight.  "They think they can 
just assign me a new partner, and business as usual?  No 
way.  You tag along with me if you want, Agent Doggett, but 
*Scully* is my partner."

".. I know."  Doggett nodded resignedly.  "I'm sorry, 
Muldah.  I didn't ask for this."

Mulder snorted.  "Of course not.  No one ever *asks* to be 
assigned to the X-Files.  It's a fast track to nowhere, and 
if you have a shred of ambition in you, you'll try as hard 
as you possibly can to get transferred out as soon as 
possible."

After a moment, Doggett spoke again.  "Muldah, I don't 
believe in aliens, I don't believe in ghosts, I don't 
believe in whatever-the-hell else you deal with down there.  
But I've seen enough on this case already - whatever we 
differ on, we'll find her.  That's what I'm here for, and 
I'll do it."

"You find her, Agent Doggett, and you can kiss your career 
goodbye."

"I don't care.  I keep my promises.  .. See you Monday at 
work?"

Mulder nodded with a resigned sigh, and turned back to the 
window, already thinking of Scully again, as Doggett closed 
the door behind him.


X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X


Fin


X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X*X



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AXF is your list for ALL X-Files Fanfic... all genres, all characters, all rati
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