From: Keleka <keleka3@yahoo.com>
Date: Fri, 16 Jun 2000 19:34:49 -0700 (PDT)
Subject: xfc: "You are not alone" by Keleka (post-Requiem)
Source: xfc

From: Keleka <keleka3@yahoo.com>

You are not alone  (1/1)
By Keleka
Email: keleka3@yahoo.com
Distribution: Gossamer, Spookys, Xemplary,
etc.
Rating: G 
Spoiler Warning: Requiem, Avatar
Content Statement: msr
Classification: VR, humor
Keywords: MSR, Skinner, Frohike
Summary: Scully and Skinner share a pre-natal moment.

Archive: Sure! Please tell me where so I can
visit.
Disclaimer: Get real!  If I owned this cash
cow, do you really think I'd be living in
Mississippi? 
Feedback:  It's certainly welcome in my
house!
Author's Note: Huge steaming piles of thanks to
Shoshana, Fabulous Monster, and TBishop,
who graciously beta read my stuff, usually
without too much complaining and always with
great insight.  God help me.  I'm turning into a
vignette writer.  
All my fanfic (X-Files, Hawaii Five-0, and Star
Trek) can be found at http://www.geocities.com/keleka3

This is sort of songfic and sort of not. (You can get
the complete lyrics on my website.)  I needed a break
from the casefile I'm working on.  And it helped
satiate this sudden appetite I seem to have for Walter
Skinner.  (Forgive me, Father, for I have sinned.)





You Are Not Alone
by Keleka


Damn it to hell!

I slam shut the drawer to Mulder's desk.  I'm craving
sunflower seeds and there's not a one to be found
anywhere in this office.  But that's not why I'm
cursing.  And it's not why I'm crying.

Damn it to hell!

The doctor in me knows this is perfectly normal. 
Pregnant women have emotions that are all over the
map.  But this is ME, dammit.

Me!

I'm crying over a stupid Michael Jackson song playing
on the radio.  The damned King of Weird has reduced me
to a blubbering pool of tears.  That settles it.  Only
classical music stations on the radio from now on.

I've heard this stupid song a million times.  Who
hasn't?  Every radio station in America played it at
least thirty times a day a few years ago.  But now it
has meaning to me and the flood gates are open.

'Another day has gone, I'm still all alone.
How could this be?  You're not here with me.
You never said goodbye, someone tell me why,
Did you have to go, and leave my world so cold?'

Dammit!

I reach for the radio and flip it off before the next
verse has me blubbering like a teeny bopper.  It
doesn't help much with my immediate problem though,
and finally I surrender to the flood of hormones and
lower my head to the desk, sobbing.

'Snick.'

I hear the door to the office open and my body tenses.
 Someone has come in and try as I might, I can't force
the sobs to stop.

"Agent Scully?"

Crap.  It's Skinner.  Damn him anyway for being so
considerate and saving me the trip up to his office. 
Why couldn't he have been a typical clueless male and
just summon me to his office?

I try to pull myself together and fail miserably.

"Dana?"

I hear him take several steps closer.  I know that I'd
better put a sock in it if I'm to have any hope of
avoiding him rushing to my side and trying to console
me in his stiff, Marine way.  'Cowboy up, Scully,' as
Mulder would say.

I suck in a deep breath and pull myself upright.  When
I raise my eyes to meet his I can feel my resolve
beginning to crumble again but I mentally slap myself
and regain some control.  He looks relieved that I've
stopped sobbing, though I'm sure the tears flooding
down my cheeks are keeping him off balance.

"Dana, what's wrong?" he asks softly.

That's all it takes.  I have to lower my head to the
desk again and surrender to the inevitability of it.

There's a flurry of motion now and I hear him step
beside me.  He opens Mulder's rolodex and spins it
around a few times before settling on a card.  I hear
him lift the phone and dial.

"This is Skinner," he says in his usual command voice.
 I can only imagine who he's calling.  Kimberly?  My
therapist?  My mother?  "I need you to come get Agent
Scully and take her home."

I try to lift my head to protest but before I can
blurt out an objection his hand lands gently on my
shoulder and I lose my resolve.  It's probably for the
best.  The last thing he needs is a Special Agent who
can't control her emotions.

Apparently whoever is on the other end of the call
asks no questions.  Skinner hangs up the phone and
pushes the rolodex away.  He sits on the corner of the
desk and looks down at me patiently.

"Want to tell me what's wrong?"

I raise my head and look at him through tear-filled
eyes.  He's been so wonderful these past months. 
Helping me assemble baby furniture.  Keeping me
company when I feel low.  Running interference
whenever the accountants try to cut off Mulder's
salary.  It's no wonder half the Hoover Building
thinks it's Skinner who knocked me up.

But I can't tell him this.  I can't tell him that my
hormones are so out of control that a single song can
reduce me to big puddle of estrogen-goo.  I have no
doubt he'd demand my badge and my weapon and send me
home on maternity leave.

He waits patiently for me to answer.  When I don't, he
nods understandingly.  He thinks he knows the answer. 
He thinks I'm crying because I miss Mulder, and Lord
knows, I DO miss Mulder.  I miss Mulder every minute
of every day, and if that's all it took to make me
cry, I'd have handed him my badge and weapon weeks
ago.

He suggests I get my things together, so I do.  We
don't speak while I gather together a few files--those
with the best leads on Mulder and one that is an
honest-to-God X-File, a 'monster-of-the-week' case
that I've got two agents working on.  One of them is
open-minded though she lacks creativity; the other,
God help him, is just like I was eight years ago. 
It's a wonder they ever close a case.

I finish gathering my things and my curiosity gets the
best of me.  I begin to ask Skinner who he called when
there is a light knock on the door and it opens.

Frohike!  I look at Skinner and he nods.  I should
have known these two ex-Marines would bond.  Semper
Fi, guys.  They confer for a moment in low tones
before Frohike puts his hand on the small of my back
and guides me out the building to his van.  His touch
reminds me of Mulder's and I feel the tears well
again.  I quickly put on my sunglasses to save me from
further scrutiny.


				**

Damn it to hell!

Frohike won't leave.  Says Skinner told him to stay
with me until he could get here after work.  I've been
trapped in my bedroom for four hours.  It's not that I
don't like Frohike, but all I want right now is to be
alone.  

He's camped out on my sofa watching God knows what on
my TV.  Every now and then he makes a phone call and I
can hear him filling in Byers and Langly on my
'condition.'  Dammit.  By the time I go back to work
tomorrow, the whole world is going to know that the
'Ice Queen' had an emotional breakdown.  I wonder who
will win the office pool.

I haven't had anything to eat since a bagel at 6:00
a.m. and if it were up to me I'd go hungry until the
Frohike/Skinner vigil ends.  But I'm eating for two
now, and as one might imagine, this child has just as
voracious an appetite as its father.  If I don't get
something to eat soon, they really will have something
to worry about.

Swallowing my pride, I leave my bedroom and head for
the kitchen.  In the living room I see that Frohike is
on the sofa, dozing; the remote control is clasped
tightly in his dangling hand.  What is it about men
and remote controls?  As I pass, he awakens and looks
at me sheepishly.

"Guess I dozed off there for a minute," he says.  "How
are you feeling, Scully?"

"Better," I say.  It's the truth, of course.  Now that
the tears  have stopped, I feel fine.  I just hope I
don't hear that damned song again any time soon.  "I'm
going to fix something to eat.  Do you want anything?"

He glances at his watch, shaking his head.  "Skinner
ought to be here soon.  It's pizza night and Langly's
buying so I need to preserve my appetite."

I smile at the thought, remembering that Tuesday night
is indeed pizza night.  Unless we were out of town on
a case, Mulder always joined the boys for pizza night.
 Even I did, sometimes.

I'm putting together a salad with some sliced turkey
breast when there's a knock at the door.  Frohike says
he'll get it so I stay in the kitchen to put the
finishing touches on my salad.  I hear Skinner's
voice.  He's conferring in low tones with Frohike.  I
put the salad in the refrigerator and go to the living
room.

"I see the night watch is here," I say with just a
touch of annoyance in my voice.  "I really don't need
around-the-clock sentries you know."

Frohike says his goodbyes and I am face-to-face with
my boss.  I'm still embarassed about my crying jag
this morning.  I'm hoping he'll just drop it.

"I picked up some Chinese on my way over," he says. 
"I hope you haven't had dinner yet."

Well, I haven't, and I DO like Chinese.  The salad
will keep.

"I'll set the table," I say.

A few minutes later we're sitting at my dining table
with at least a dozen little white boxes spread out
around us.  Eating Chinese with Skinner isn't the same
as eating Chinese with Mulder.  For one thing, Skinner
uses chop sticks, a talent he says he picked up in
Vietnam.  Mulder almost put his eye out trying to use
chop sticks once.

For another thing, I don't feel at liberty to snatch
pieces of food off his plate.  Eating Chinese with
Mulder was like a contest to see who could steal the
most food from the other.  Skinner is generous and
willing to share, but he expects me to take what I
want out of the little white boxes, not off his plate.
 It's not nearly as much fun that way.

When I've had enough I push my plate away and watch
him as he finishes up the last of the Colonel Tso's
chicken.
He looks at me with those intense eyes of his and I
feel a nervous tingle go up my spine.  Skinner only
looks at me like that when he's about to chew me out
over something.

"I really don't need a babysitter tonight, sir," I say
quickly, hoping to divert him from whatever serious
matter he is about to raise.

He pushes his empty plate away and watches me with a
curious expression.  It's brown on blue as our eyes
lock.  I won't look away for fear I'll look weak.  He
won't look away because .... well, because he never
does.  It's the patented 'Skinner stare' and there is
no escape from it short of total capitulation.

"I have a problem, Agent Scully," he says finally,
conceding a tie in our occular skirmish.  "I need your
professional opinion."

This takes me by surprise and I feel a little guilty
for being so obstinate.  "Of course, sir," I say.

He pushes his chair back but doesn't take his eyes off
mine.  "I have an Agent who insists on investigating a
case she's too close to.  Too emotionally close."

Oh Jesus.  I should have seen this coming.  I accept
defeat in this second skirmish and lower my eyes to my
lap.

"She suffered a serious loss recently," he continues. 
"She's pregnant and the baby's father isn't available
to support her emotionally.  She has a limited circle
of friends and family to turn to."

I feel a tightness in my chest as I listen to his
litany of accusations.  "Sir, I--"

"I'm not finished yet, Agent Scully," he says. 
There's not much kindness in his voice.  He's asked
for my professional opinion and he is not going to
make this easy for me.  "This agent is working
fourteen hour days and I'd guess from the shadows
under her eyes that she's not sleeping well.  Her
health has been problematic in recent years.  She
nearly died in a coma five years ago; from cancer two
years later; and from a gun-shot wound to the stomach
just last year."

I don't want to listen to anymore of this.  He's
turning my own professionalism and pragmatism against
me.  He doesn't fight fair.  Dammit, he fights just
like Mulder.  I need some distance so I can think and
refute his arguments.  I push back my chair and start
to rise but he is too fast.  His hand reaches for mine
and holds me in place.  

"This afternoon, I went to her office and found her
sobbing uncontrollably.  She wouldn't tell me what was
wrong.  I had to send her home.  I'm not sure what I
should do, Agent Scully.  What do you recommend?"

I take a deep breath, trying to gather my strength. 
We sit in silence for several minutes and for the
first time in my life I truly understand the phrase,
"the silence is deafening.'

"It was a song," I whisper finally, my eyes still
averted.  I can almost feel his bewilderment.

"Explain," he says after a moment.

I look up now.  I want him to see that I'm not crying;
that I am not the over-emotional wreck he saw this
afternoon.  "I was crying over a song, sir."

"I still don't understand, Agent Scully."

"You've never had children, have you, sir?"  I know as
soon as I ask that I shouldn't have.  His eyes darken
with pain and, I think, with regret.

"No.  I haven't."

"My body is a battleground of hormones right now.  I
can control it most of the time, but... but sometimes
I can't.  A song on the radio made me cry this
morning.  That's what you walked in on.  I don't like
to cry, especially in front of my boss.  Having you
see me like that just made it worse and I couldn't
stop."

"What was the song?"

I look at him, surprised by his question.  His eyes
are softer now.  "'You are not alone,'" I say, meekly.
 "By Michael Jackson."

He nods, a bittersweet smile on his lips.  "That was
popular when...."  He looks away briefly but then
returns his eyes to mine.  "When Sharon died."

He knows the song.  Then I realize the deeper meaning
of what he's said.  He understands.  Really
understands.  He's been there himself.

"I'm still waiting for your opinion about my problem,
Agent Scully."

He's not going to let me off the hook is he?  I guess
I don't blame him.  He's looking out for me the way
Mulder would.  I wonder whether he's doing it for me
or for Mulder.  I guess there's really no difference.

"Well, sir," I begin, thinking fast and speaking
slowly.  "I would order this Agent to limit her time
at work to say, eight hours a day, and not to take
work home."

"Make it four days a week, with Wednesdays and
weekends off, and I'll let you come back to work,
Scully," he says firmly.  I know this is not
negotiable.

"Deal, sir," I say.  "But promise me one thing?"

"Anything."

"If I start crying over Barry Manilow songs,...shoot
me."


*end*


Final note:  If you're a fan of either of the two
singers mentioned in this story, please don't flame
me!  I actually like them both.  I even have ferrets
named after the King of Weird and his first wife.

If you're one of the half dozen people left on earth
who has not heard this song, I can send you the MP3
file.  Just ask!



=====
__________Visit my collection of X-Files, Star Trek, and Hawaii Five-0 fanfiction at http://www.geocities.com/keleka3/ where you will also find a recommendations page. 
