Summary: Mulder keeps everything bottled up inside him a little too long and Scully has to give him the faith he's lacking. Rating: PG Category: S A UST Spoilers: All of season 5, takes place after Red and Black Disclaimer: Well, it's been a challenge, but somebody had to explain why Mulder would decide that it wasn't Samantha in the diner. So, in the process of doing that public service, I borrowed some characters, some plot lines and some mythology. But I put them all back when I was finished. Archive: Everywhere Comments: vmoseley@fgi.net Thanks to Susan Proto and Gerry Hill for reading this one for me. In The Darkness Comes A Light by Vickie Moseley vmoseley@fgi.net disclaimed in part one Dana Scully sat in the back of her partner's car, shivering. It was cold, even for March. But the chill she was feeling had nothing whatsoever with the temperature or the lightly falling drizzle that was misting the night outside the car window. It had everything to do with her partner. She had told Fox Mulder from her most recent hospital bed that she couldn't follow him blindly anymore. Who was she really trying to convince? Not her partner. She'd told him those same words so many times in the past, and each time with a disastrous result. Each time the words had been uttered, she now realized, she was giving him her tacit approval to go out and almost get himself killed. Images of Dead Horse, Alaska, a lonely little hospital in the middle of Iowa--too many scenes to even identify them all, came crashing back at her. So if by saying those words she was trying to divert disaster, she'd better stop saying them because they didn't work. No, she realized, she was trying to convince herself with those words. Her question now was why? She didn't have a chance to contemplate the answer because several armed men appeared out of the mist. In the middle of the group, looking blankly ahead, was her partner. He's alive. She almost chuckled at the thought. It seemed to be her first thought upon seeing him whenever they were separated. It was almost a greeting, of sorts. He's alive. I'm alive. We're both all right. The door to the backseat open, letting in a blast of wet and frigid air. Mulder was 'helped' into the seat, but he seemed perfectly capable of movement. He said nothing, just sat tiredly next to her. His hair was damp and a few strands clung to his skin, dripping into his eyes. His clothes weren't mussed in any way, he hadn't resisted the soldiers sent to find him. But something about the way he was holding himself screamed at her for her attention. Something was wrong. His eyes, she decided a split second later. His eyes were distant, not even in the same car as she was. They were cold, and lifeless. The usual golden flecks that she always noticed when he was thinking, or just being a tease, were missing. His eyes looked black and it scared her. His eyes aren't dilated, she scolded herself. It was her instinct to switch into medical mode whenever her partner returned from places unknown. But not all injury is physical, her little voice, the one she was listening to more and more often, whispered to her. The voice sounded very much like her partner. He had turned his face away from her, was staring ahead, still saying nothing. She had to reach him, but with so many others listening-- "What happened?" she asked, a coarse whisper against the slapping of the windshield wipers and the sound of the car's defroster. He looked at her then, and her heart stopped beating. She'd never seen such a void in his eyes. It was as if his very soul had been snatch from his body leaving behind a fragile shell. "I don't know," he answered, and in his soft voice she could hear a heart breaking. She just wasn't sure whose heart it was--hers or his. He brought his hands up to his eyes, as if the dim light from outside the car was suddenly too much for him. The way he was rubbing his forehead, she knew he had a headache, but it went far beyond that. She wished it was only a headache, maybe only a brain tumor--something she could treat, could handle. She feared what he was going through was far worse, and she had no idea what to do for him. She reached out tentatively at first, but grew bolder. She grasped his fingers with her own and pulled his hand away from his face. His eyes were screaming at her, but for what, it was hard to determine. Understanding? Acceptance? Help? Help. Help to end his suffering. She squeezed his hand and hoped it would suffice. His hand held no warmth at all. The young soldier in camo fatigues drove them to the gate and then got out. He opened the back car door, Mulder's side, and helped him to stand, then handed him the keys. Mulder stood there, in the rain, staring at the keys like they were some foreign object and possibly lethal. In your state, they probably are, Scully thought to herself. She hurried out of the car and walked quickly to the driver's side. "I'll drive," she offered, and didn't wait for an answer. She plucked the keys out of his hand and he gave her a confused look. "Go on, you're getting soaked," she scolded softly and he gave her the first hint that in the shell before her, her partner was still alive. He smiled and nodded gratefully. But it was a brief moment, and by the time he was seated in the passenger seat, he had retreated back into himself. She tried a few times to engage him in conversation. He'd closed his eyes and had leaned the seat back. If he responded at all, it was usually no more than a grunt or two. It made her destination that much easier to decide. When she pulled up to a stop and turned off the car, he startled, almost as if he'd been asleep. He looked out the window and then turned to her. She was getting out of the car and came over to his door. "Come on, Mulder. Inside. I want to check you out." "I'm fine," he countered, in the monotone that she was beginning to take for granted. "Yeah, sure, whatever, but you're not getting your car keys until you come inside, so you might want to hurry it up a bit if you intend to get home anytime soon," she said defiantly and started up the walk. "Scully," he called out and she turned toward him. He started to say something, but no words came out of his mouth. He closed his mouth and brought his hand up to his head again, then dropped his hand and followed after her. Her apartment was dark, and she turned on a few lights as she progressed through it toward her kitchen. Mulder followed behind, turning off about half the lights she'd just turned on. She noticed immediately. "Light hurts your eyes?" she asked. "Energy conservation," he replied, but she could see how he averted his eyes from any direct light. "Yeah, right," she smirked. "Take off your coat, I want to get a few things. Want some tea?" "Coffee?" he suggested. "Not till I see what I'm dealing with," she answered and turned the heat on under her kettle before going into the bathroom to get her supplies. When she'd graduated medical school, one of her aunts had given her a black doctor's bag. At the time, she'd thought it was humorous, since she'd never use it in her chosen field. Now, having restocked it more times than she could count, she thanked her aunt silently every time she pulled it out. When she got back out to the living room, he was still in his coat. She gave him a questioning look and he shrugged. "I was cold. You usually want me to stay warm," he answered her unspoken question. "Take off the coat, we can put this around your shoulders," she told him and pulled the afghan off the arm of the sofa, placing it around him. "I'm not in shock," he told her. "I'm just cold." "And you got your medical degree--when?" she countered. She started with a quick check of his pulse, which was a little fast, but still in normal ranges. His eyes were not dilated, he reacted well to motion. Light did seem to make him squint. "Do you still have a headache?" she asked. "That's like asking someone if they still beat their wife, Scully," he countered. She glared at him and he relented. "Yes, I still have a headache. But it's not that bad. Light seems to hurt a little." "I don't think you were hit on the head," she assured him. "It's more like a second degree tension headache, not a fifth degree concussion headache," he told her. "Mulder, only you would have specific degrees of headache," she chided gently. She did a quick check of his blood pressure and was satisfied with the results. "You aren't in shock," she proclaimed. "Told you so," he shot back. "Look, as much fun as it is to play 'doctor', I'd really like to go home right now. So if you don't mind, may I please have my car keys?" "Are you sure you don't want to crash here? You can stretch out in the spare room," she offered. He shook his head. "Thanks, Scully, but as you just determined, I'm fine. I need to get home." "Mulder--" She didn't want him to leave. He still had that 'dead' look about him and it was frightening her. But she couldn't exactly hold him against his will. She reluctantly handed him the car keys. He pulled on his coat and walked slowly to the door, turning when she called his name again. "I don't know what I saw, Scully," he said helplessly. "I don't know what to believe. All I know is that I'm tired and I want to go home and get some sleep. I'll see you in the morning, we'll figure out what to put in the report to Skinner. Maybe, if we're lucky, the Air Force won't be all over our asses for what happened tonight. Get some sleep--I'll see you in the morning." She hurried over to the door and caught it as he was about to close it behind him. "Mulder, if you need me--just to talk--" He smiled at her, a lop-sided half smile that spoke volumes to how tired he was. "I do know that much, Scully," he said affectionately. "G'night." "G'night," she called after him, but he was already too far down the hall to hear her soft whisper. end of part one ***** In the Darkness Comes A Light (2/7) by vmoseley@fgi.net disclaimed in part one FBI Headquarters, Pathology lab 11:15 am They had barely had time to get their coats off when both of them had been called out of the office. Mulder had been ordered before a joint committee investigating the mass 'self-immolulations' and Scully had been requested to assist the pathology lab in the identification of the burn victims. She tried to call down to the office, hoping that he would have returned from his meeting, but the line kept ringing without an answer. She decided that at 11:30 she would request a lunch break and go find him. As it turned out, he found her. "Want some lunch?" he asked from the doorway. She had just finished a match of dental records and was more than happy to take a break. "Let me clean up a bit," she requested and he motioned that he would wait for her in the hall. As she walked toward him, some five minutes later, she caught him rubbing his forehead again. "Still have that headache?" she asked. "No, this is a brand new one," he smirked. "Courtesy of too many people with their heads up their asses." He reached in his pocket to retrieve a bottle of ibuprofen, popping two in his mouth and swallowing them dry. "Meeting didn't go well?" They were moving quickly through the halls and it made conversation difficult, but she didn't want to wait to find out what had gone on. "Oh, it went great. Skinner sat there and gave the 'aliens are coming' line he gave us yesterday, everybody immediately glared at me, and I was then put in a position of telling them how much of a fool I've been for the last five years. It was great. I'm just sorry they couldn't have used this tactic in the Spanish Inquisition." "Skinner actually told the committee he thinks there was 'alien involvement'?" she asked. "Yep. I would have been proud--six months ago. To tell the truth, I didn't think he was actually reading my reports all these years, but I guess I was wrong. He's fallen for it, hook, line and sinker. I should have become a big haired preacher in my younger years, Scully. I would have made a million converts by now." His voice was bitter and a little too loud for her liking. "Mulder, let's continue this outside, OK?" He shrugged and followed her out into the March sunshine. It had warmed up considerably with the passing of the warm front during the night. The grass on the Capitol Mall was turning green and lush after the rain and now with the sunshine. It was a beautiful spring day. "Let's grab a hot dog," Scully suggested. "My treat." They found their favorite stand just a block from the National Archives. Scully started to order for them both, but Mulder stopped her. "There were donuts and bagels at the meeting. I'm stuffed. Just get me an iced tea." She nodded and placed the order and they stood in silence waiting for it. With food and drink in hand, they walked toward a bench not far away. "So Skinner said it was aliens and you said it wasn't," Scully recapped as they settled into the bench. "That's the short version. Of course, at first, they thought I was pulling something. You should have heard the guy from the Joint Chiefs of Staff when I suggested it was a military endeavor. I think the number of bugs in my apartment will rival many of the motels we've stayed at after that little discussion." "You told them you think it's a military conspiracy," she stated, not sure she was any happier with this turn of events. "Basically. I suggested that the conspiracy was more than likely international. Some shit for brains made a crack about the 'Trilateral Commission'--you know the old right wing conspiracy theory, and I shot him down. I've seen it, Scully. I've seen how easy it is to be fooled." He took a sip of his drink and stared out across the lawn. "I saw it happen to you just the other day." "You think I was fooled," she said quietly. "I took you to Werber because I wanted you to unveil his duplicity, Scully. I figured you would tear him a new asshole and uncover the charade all at the same time. I was praying for it, actually. The bastard deceived me, he used me. I should sue for his license. But then you, you--Scully, I thought you said you'd never been able to achieve a trance state," he accused. "I never have, Mulder. I swear." "Then what was that? Wishful thinking? Were you play acting? What? You were under, Scully. You came back and you hadn't realized I was there." His eyes were full of pain and accusation. "Mulder, I don't know what to tell you. I've never had a successful session before. I don't know what was different." "I wanted you to see how he could lead you. I wanted you to trap him at his own game. You weren't supposed to believe him, Scully!" "Is that why you left so quickly?" she asked. He stood up and dug his hands in his coat pockets. "I couldn't sit there and watch it happen to you, too. Damn, I underestimated him. I mean, I was a fool and I can accept that, but I thought sure that you would see through him." "Mulder," she said in a low, soft voice. "Maybe you were right all along." He spun on her, glaring down at her. "Why? Because now you believe and I don't?! Because now you're the fool and I'm the voice of reason? Why the hell now, Scully? Maybe that tumor did more damage than we first thought!" The words hung between them like a razor. She clung to her self restraint. She took a few deep breaths before speaking. "Mulder--" "I'm sorry, Scully. I'm sorry. I don't know what made me say that," he apologized hurriedly. "Look, the break was over five minutes ago. I have to get back. I'll talk to you later." He ran back toward the building, leaving her there on the bench, alone. She made her way slowly back to the office, wondering what the hell was going on. She'd made the mistake of thinking that Mulder would be pleased with her new insight into the abductions. Instead, she was faced with his resentment and disbelief. It's your own fault, she scolded herself. For five years you've told him he was crazy to think like this and now that you're ready to accept it as a possibility, you've finally convinced him of the need for logic and skepticism. She had finally converted Fox Mulder. She had finally accomplished the impossible. She'd made the believer a skeptic and in the transformation, she realized sadly, she might have destroyed him. The basement office was empty when she returned. She assumed he must still be at the meeting. Reluctantly, she left a note asking him to call her in the Path lab when he got back, and she left to resume the identifications. He called about half past 3. "I've just got a minute, I'm on a flight out at 5," he told her and she could hear him shuffling papers on his desk. "Where are we going," she asked, slipping out of the lab coat she was wearing and silently wondering if she'd repacked the bag at the back of her closet that last time they came home from the field. "Sorry, Scully, I'm going to this dance stag," he replied. "Skinner loaned me out to VCS. That's what I get for not backing him up this morning, apparently. You're supposed to stay behind and help ID those victims." She could tell by his tone that he wasn't happy with the turn of events. "Mulder, I don't like the idea of you going out alone. What's this all about?" "Serial killer in Minnesota. St. Paul area. Murdered four women, all nurses. The profiler who was working the case came up sick--they're afraid it might be that Strep A crap you were telling me about. He's out of it and they needed someone who doesn't have to be spoon fed. Since Skinner was pissed at me anyway--ta da, I get the assignment." "Maybe I should go up and talk to Skinner," Scully found herself saying. "And tell him what? That you want to come along?" Mulder snorted. "Get real, Scully. This is my 'kick in the ass', not yours. Just hold down the fort. I should be gone two, maybe three days tops." "Call me when you get there--in case you have any messages," she said, grabbing for any excuse that came to her. "I'll have my phone on, but sure, if you want, I'll call tonight. Gotta go, I still need to swing passed my place and I'm booked out of Dulles." "Have a safe flight," she said, but realized he'd already hung up the phone. Scully's apartment 12:45 pm She had just about given up on him when the phone rang. She answered with a quick greeting. "It's me," he said by way of introduction. "Sorry it's so late. I just got back from the latest crime scene." He sounded tired and dejected. "Another one? When?" she asked, concerned. "Sometime between 6 and 7 this evening. She was discovered by a security guard. It wasn't that dark out, so she didn't ask for an escort," Mulder rattled off the details in a monotone. "Are you OK?" she asked. "Fine and dandy," he replied, but she could hear the sarcasm. "I'm setting up the computer now. Gonna do some checking, but I think I have a handle on this creep." "You plan on doing the profile tonight?" She didn't mean it to sound so overprotective, but the way he was talking was making her nervous. "No, I thought I'd order up some movies from room service and have a Bela Lagosi film festival," he snorted. "Of course I'm doing it tonight. The rate this jerk is moving, he could kill again by tomorrow." "I know, I'm sorry. It's just that you sound so tired," she apologized. "Nah. Just a little jet lag. I did order some coffee--I'll be fine. With any luck, I'll be home tomorrow night." "Did you leave your car in long term or short term?" "Short term. If I'm here another night, could you--" "I'll have Mom drive me over and I'll take it back to your place," she assured him. "Thanks. Remind me that I owe you my undying gratitude and devotion," he said with the only enthusiasm he'd voiced since she'd picked up the phone. "I'll make you spring for dinner when you get back," she smiled. "Mulder, try and get some sleep, OK?" "I knew there was something missing in this conversation," he said and she could see the indulgent grin on his face. "Yes, mother. I promise to get some sleep. Sometime soon." "You do that," she warned with a smile. "Call me if you need anything." "You know I will. Have fun with the dental records, Scully." "Good night, Mulder. Sleep tight." She hung up the receiver, hoping he really would get some sleep. end part two ***** In The Darkness Comes A Light (3/7) by vmoseley@fgi.net disclaimed in part one The next day 3:45 pm Dana Scully whiffed a breath to blow the strand of hair out of her eyes and mentally decided that she now had a new definition of hell. Hell, for her at least, was going to be reconstructing and identifying burn victims using old dental records for the rest of eternity. An eternity that had started the day before and looked like it had only just begun. "Agent Scully?" a voice behind interrupted her thoughts and in another circumstance, she probably would have given the intruder a big, wet kiss. But Kimberly just wasn't her type. "Yeah, Kim," Scully replied, marking another name down on her list. Seventeen bodies identified, 63 to go. "Assistant Director Skinner would like a moment of your time," Kim said crisply. "Ah, right now?" Scully asked, suddenly a little unsure of why Skinner was calling her up--alone. "If it's not too much bother," came the reply. OK, Scully told herself, something is up. Meetings with Skinner weren't uncommon, but they were never at her convenience. Still, things were a bit strange around the Bureau. She started to pull off her gloves. "I'll be there in five," she assured Kim, who left to go back to her desk. Scully was there in three minutes, and was immediately ushered into the inner office. She took her usual seat, only glancing briefly at the unoccupied chair next to her. Not having Mulder there was making her very uneasy. "Thank you for coming up on such short notice, Scully. How's the work progressing?" Skinner asked, flipping closed a file folder to indicate she had his undivided attention. "Slow, but it's progressing. I can't help but think that there might be someone else in the lab a little better suited for this, sir. I mean, I'm not exactly doing autopsies. It's pretty straight forward--" "Duly noted, Scully, but I'm trusting you to look for things that others might miss," Skinner said in clipped tones. "_Things_, sir?" "You know, anything out of the ordinary--" Skinner was staring at her, a bland expression in place. But his shoulders were hunched in a way that led Scully to believe he was hoping she would fill in the blanks in their conversation. It came to her in a flash. "You're expecting me to look for chips," she said tersely. "I was hoping you would look for anything that might give us some indication why these deaths occurred, Agent Scully," Skinner said with an edge to his voice. "If you found 'chips', similar to the one--" his voice faltered for a moment. "I would expect you to look beyond the obvious." "I see," Scully said evenly. "Have you? Have you found any chips?" Scully thought for a moment. This conversation was one that she was used to having, just not with her superior. "I have located 15 chips in 17 bodies, sir. The other two bodies were burned so badly that nothing remained but bones. I suspect the chips are not impervious to extreme heat, but due to their size, that's hard to determine." "Fifteen," Skinner whispered softly. "Scully, that's not the only reason I called you in today. I was wondering if you could give me your impressions of Agent Mulder's emotional state." The question knocked her for a loop. Scully furrowed her brow. "Sir, I believe Agent Mulder is perfectly fine. I find nothing in his behavior to make me suspect--" "You don't think his sudden change in perspective, shall we call it, is, uh, unusual?" Skinner interrupted. Scully sat there. What could she say? Yes, I think it's damned unusual, but not without cause? Could she say she thought everyone who had come into contact with Mulder had, at one time or another, deceived him, either knowingly, or unknowingly. Could she tell her superior that she felt she was to blame for his newly found detachment and confusion? Could she tell Skinner that Mulder's attitude and change of direction was scaring the shit out of her? No. In the end, as she always did, she found a way to deflect her superior and protect her partner. "Sir, I believe Agent Mulder is focusing his attention on other avenues at the moment. I think we have uncovered enough evidence recently to point to a conspiracy in place in the highest levels of our government. I don't think Section Chief Blevins should be considered an isolated case. I think Agent Mulder feels the same way and is trying to uncover these misdeeds." Skinner sat back in his chair and regarded her with a steady gaze. "Why did you go to that bridge, Scully? What made you leave your car at the hospital and take a disabled woman 150 miles away to a bridge in the middle of nowhere? What were you doing?" "Sir, as I said in my report--" "You reported that you have no recollection of leaving the hospital, or of traveling to the bridge, or even of the deaths of nearly 100 people--death by fire. I know, I've read your report." "Sir, that is my honest recollection. I don't know how I got there." Scully squirmed uncomfortably in her seat. "Do you think you were 'called' there? Called as Cassandra Spender suggested?" Scully took a deep breath. "Sir, as I told you--" "Agent Mulder is willing to believe that you were instructed to go there to be exterminated by a military operation, perpetrated against unarmed civilians. Do you support or deny his conclusion?" Scully closed her eyes. "Sir, I have no evidence of that," she said meekly. Then, opening her eyes, she glared at her boss. "Nor do I have evidence that an alien spacecraft was involved. As I told you, I simply don't know." Skinner nodded, picking up a folder to divert attention and probably to gather his next thoughts. "Scully, I've asked you this before and you were hardly forthcoming, but I would hope you would be more trusting this time. Are you worried about Agent Mulder's emotional state?" At her silence, he added "I'm only asking as a friend." "Is that why you sent him on a profiling case, sir," she asked bitterly. "Because it's a pretty odd way of showing friendship. You certainly know what working for VCS cost him." Skinner's jaw tightened. "It was the first assignment out of town, Scully. I thought he needed the distance." "From me? Sir, if you're implying that anything improper is occurring between myself and Agent Mulder--" "Get off the high horse, Scully. I'm not accusing anyone. I simply thought Agent Mulder needed a little time to himself, a little distance. It's not a terribly difficult case, not for someone with his abilities. If you think it might be too much for him . . ." Now the ball was in her court. If she admitted that she thought the case was too much, she was also admitting her worry. But should she be worried simply because Mulder was finally questioning everything he'd previously believed without question? Self awareness and introspection were hardly signs of psychosis. Skinner was still waiting for an answer. "No, sir. I just meant, it would have been better if I were there to assist him. That's all." "Well, if he needs you to assist him, have him call me. But until he does, I'm afraid you have other duties." She was dismissed. It was that sudden. She didn't say anything as she left. Skinner was already deeply engrossed in one of the folders on his desk. She closed the door without question and went back to the lab. It bothered her the rest of the day and into dinner. Finally, near 8 o'clock, she couldn't take it anymore. She dialed his cell phone. He answered on the second ring. "Mulder." "Mulder, it's me," she said, suddenly feeling a little foolish. She had no reason to call other than to check up on him. She had to come up with a good reason, quickly. "Scully, hi. So, what's up?" Like now. "Ah, that 302 on the case in Pennsylvania was returned. You failed to put down the names of the victims and the circumstances surrounding the crime." "That's OK. I'm thinking spontaneous human combustion might be pretty far fetched in that case. I'll look at it when I get back." He was quiet a minute. "Is that all?" "Skinner called me into his office today," she admitted. "Why?" "He wanted to find out . . . he's concerned about your behavior," she stumbled out. "Asking to have my water analyzed, is he? Geez, and I didn't even take a swing at him this time," Mulder huffed. "What did you say?" "That you were fine. That you just had a different perspective now." "Thanks, I think. Anything else?" "He wanted to know why I went to the bridge. And he wanted to know if I was finding anything unusual in the bodies." "Unusual, as in . . ." "Chips. Computer chips." Mulder was quiet for a moment. "And--" "I've located 15 chips. I've only examined 17 bodies so far." "Seventeen!" Mulder whistled. "You're cruisin'," he said with admiration. "So Skinner thinks it's alien abductions, does he? What about you?" "Mulder--" "Chill, Scully. I'm just pullin' your chain. So, Skinner thinks I've lost my marbles and now he's touting the 'alien abduction' line? Will wonders never cease?" "How's the case?" Scully asked, desperately wanting to change the subject. "You know my car in short term parking?" "You're there for another night?" "Maybe more than one. We had a handle on the guy, but he slipped through our fingers. I might have to wait and see where he pops up next." "I'll move your car. So, what did you have for dinner, Mulder?" "Smooth, Dr. Scully. I would never have detected that as a inquiry into my eating habits," Mulder chuckled. "They brought in fried chicken from Hardees. Cole slaw, biscuits, really lumpy mashed potatoes and gravy--I skipped the honey because I haven't had a good run in the last two days--and I bought an apple from a grocery store down the block. Happy?" "Very," she grinned into the phone. "And what did you have for dinner, little girl?" he purred. "Caesar salad. Iced tea." "Like you need to diet," he sighed. "Hey, I would love to tell you what I had for breakfast this morning, but I have some work to do here." "Need a hand?" she asked, hoping he would say yes. Although the conversation had been generally light, something in his voice worried her. He sounded tired, drained. She didn't like it. "No, not really. Besides, I actually agree with Skinner on one point. If you do the exams, you'll know to look for the chips. It might lead us closer to the brains behind this conspiracy, Scully." "OK, then. I'll stay here." She tried hard to hide her disappointment at being stranded in the office while he was out in the field. "Great. Hey, thanks for taking care of the car, and I'll try to call tomorrow, OK?" "Yeah, sure. And don't forget to get some sleep, OK?" "You worry too much, Scully. It's spoiling me," he said lightly. "G'night." "Night, Mulder," she said and hung up the phone. Dana Scully's apartment 3:06 am At first she thought it was her alarm ringing in her ear. Then, her groggy thought processes reminded her that she had a CD alarm clock. She finally grabbed the phone next to her bed. "Scully." Silence greeted her on the other end of the line. Then, a soft sigh. She knew instantly who was there. "Mulder?" "I'm sorry," he apologized, the words tumbling out quickly over the distance between them. "I'm sorry, Scully. I shouldn't have called this late--" "No, no, it's OK. Is there a problem? Are you all right?" she asked, rubbing the sleep from her eyes and sitting up against the headboard. "I'm OK. I just--I fell asleep and I . . . I'm sorry, I shouldn't have called--" "Mulder, did you have a bad dream?" she asked gently. He'd called her before with nightmares, she'd never minded. But tonight, he seemed more hesitant than usual. "I just--I needed to talk to you." "I'm listening," she said, hoping he would open up and tell her what was bothering him. "Well, really, I guess I just needed to hear your voice," he admitted. "I can recite the Declaration of Independence," she offered lightly. She could hear his chuckle at the other end. "Now that puts a whole new definition on 900 numbers," he teased. "Feeling better?" she asked. "Yeah, a little. I'm OK, Scully. Really. I'm--" "Mulder, if you say 'I'm sorry' again, I'll be forced to come all the way to Minnesota so I can kick your ass," she said in mock sterness. He chuckled again. "Now I sure wouldn't want that. I'm fine, Scully. Right as rain. Go back to sleep." "Sweet dreams, Mulder," she said softly and heard his answering click on the other end as the line was disconnected. Try as she might, she couldn't get her worry for him out of her thoughts. It was a long time until morning. end part three ***** In The Darkness Comes A Light (4/7) by vmoseley@fgi.net disclaimed in part one 8:35 am Morning came entirely too early for Scully. It hit her square in the face and brought with it a pounding headache. It would have concerned her more if she didn't know that it was lack of sleep and nothing more. She'd tossed and turned after Mulder's call. At first her thoughts centered on her partner. That was bad enough, but then her train of thoughts wandered over into the events of the night on the bridge and all chances of slumber flew out the window. She thought again about what she'd told Skinner. That she didn't know what had happened. It was true. She didn't _know_. But more and more when she listened to the tape of her session with Dr. Werber, she found her 'memories' more and more believable. She wanted to talk to Mulder about it. And there was the rub. Now, when she was finally interested in hypnoregression, finally willing to see it as a possibility for regaining lost or stolen memories, Mulder was the one standing there with arms crossed, telling her she was crazy. Or worse yet, that she was being duped. She had no one left to turn to and it upset her. There had always been certain topics she couldn't discuss with Mulder. Religion, reincarnation, cancer, being the three big ones on the list. But now, he didn't seem to want to hear her thoughts on UFO's either. I'm only good to him when I don't believe, she mused angrily and crawled out of bed to get ready for the day. In the lab, the bodies kept piling up. By noon, she had identified 12 additional people, and retrieved 5 chips. She was beginning to wonder why not everyone on the bridge had a chip, if they were indeed the 'homing' device Mulder claimed them to be. On top of the bodies she was working with, she kept a close eye on the other lab personnel and their work, hoping to retrieve additional chips. It kept her very busy. The afternoon produced 10 more chips out of a total of 25 bodies. She had seen enough burned and charred flesh, heat cracked bone and cartilage to last a life time. She was working on the remains of a young woman, sorting through dental charts and medical records when it all hit. Her name was Cynthia Truman. She was 33 years old. Married, two children, born 1988 and 1993. She was unrecognizable to her husband and daughters. All the detachment Scully had nurtured came crashing down with the force of a twenty story building demolished by explosion. Tears burned at her eyes and her throat, she pulled off her gloves and ran from the lab, just making it to the restroom before her lashes gave up holding back the torrent that flowed down her cheeks. She huddled in a stall for a long time, shaking with quiet sobs. Fortunately, no one was in the room with her, she was alone, as she wanted to be. But she really didn't want to be alone. With shaky hands, she withdrew her cell phone and hit speed dial. She forced herself to calm down enough so that Mulder could hear her and understand her. "The cellular customer you are trying to reach has traveled beyond the service area . . ." Her heart dropped and the tears flowed again. She dug in her pocket and found a wadded piece of paper. She wiped her eyes and sniffed, then dialed the number printed on it. It took a couple of rings, but finally, someone picked up. "Federal Bureau of Investigation, Minneapolis-St. Paul. May I direct your call?" "I'm trying to reach Special Agent Fox Mulder. He's working with Agent Mel Bocks--" "I'll ring Agent Bocks number," came the clipped Midwestern accent. A few more rings and another line was connected. "Bocks." "Mel, this is Dana Scully. I'm trying to reach Mulder and apparently, his cell phone battery is dead again. Is he there?" Her voice was still a little breathy, but she hoped the static of the cell phone would cover for her. "Ah, damn, Scully--I bet it's the garage. He's on a stake out at the hospital garage and your cell probably can't get through the concrete. We're using walkie talkies at the moment. He's due back at five for a debriefing--want me to have him give you a call?" Mel's voice was all efficiency and concern. She glanced at her watch. It's was a quarter after two, and Minnesota was an hour behind her. It would be six before he got to the office. She didn't want to drag him off a stake out just to tell him she'd lost it during an autopsy. She didn't really know what she was going to tell him. She might as well wait it out. "Yeah, Mel. Tell him that I'll be at home, OK?" "Will do, Scully. Good to talk to you," Mel said affably. "You, too, Mel. Thanks." She turned off the phone and tucked it back in her pocket. Wiping her eyes with the back of her hand, and blowing her nose on a handful of tissue from the roll, she squared her shoulders. Without Mulder to lean on, she wasn't looking forward to going back to that lab, but she had a job to do. By four thirty, her back muscles felt like they were about to snap. Her shoulders were so tense that she'd lost feeling in her little finger. She was not doing any one any good and so she decided to call it a day. She was home by a quarter till five and jumped in the shower for a quick rinse. Five thirty found her rummaging around her refrigerator for something to eat. She really wasn't hungry, but knew that if she didn't eat, it would become a habit. She'd watched Mulder give up food for tension too many times to let it happen to her. She settled on some cottage cheese and sliced peaches and ate it in the living room, glancing at the phone every minute or so. The phone rang at 6:05. "Hi, Mulder," she said, forcing some cheerfulness into her voice and juggling the phone receiver and the remote so she could mute the volume button. "Agent Scully, uh, this isn't Mulder. It's Mel Bocks again." The sound of his tone sent cold rivers running through her veins. Something was definitely wrong in Minnesota. "Mulder," she whispered. "What's happened?" she demanded. "Uh, we don't really know at the moment. He seemed fine, at least he did to the guy he was on stake out with. He came in, I gave him your message and he told me he'd call you after the meeting--" "Mel, what's wrong with him," Scully forced herself to stay calm, but the play by play was taking entirely too long to get to the point of the call. "We started the meeting and he gave his report. Then, he sat down. But he got up again, sort of like he was going to the john or something. He took a step, stumbled against the chair and collapsed. I got over to him pretty fast, I was sitting closest to him, and he was breathing, but I couldn't get him to wake up. His eyes were dilated and he was breathing kinda funny--rapid and short. Our secretary called 911 and they just got here. Said we needed to call his next of kin--they're taking him to St. Vincent's Medical Center. I just thought you would know who to call." "Me, Mel. I'm his next of kin. I'll be on the first flight out. Give the hospital my cell phone number and tell them that I'm on my way. I'll call before I get on the plane. Do you have the number of the hospital there, so I can call the ER?" Scully hurriedly scribbled the number on the back of the paper with the FBI regional office number. "I'll be there as soon as I can. Tell Mulder to hold on, OK, Mel?" "Scully, . . . Dana, I don't know that he can hear me--" Mel said sadly. "Sure he can, Mel. Just tell him for me, please." "You have my word, Dana. And I'm real sorry I didn't get him to call you sooner." "It's all right, Mel. Really. It's all going to be all right." end of part four ******* In The Darkness Comes A Light (5/7) by vmoseley@fgi.net disclaimed in part one St. Vincent's Medical Center Minneapolis, MN 9:55 pm She chanted that mantra all the way through the two and a half hour flight from Baltimore-Washington International Airport to Minneapolis. Mel had sent an agent to the gate to pick her up and take her directly to the hospital. There was still no word on her partner, but during her conversation with the ER staff before boarding, she knew he was having a full blood work up and a PET scan. Mel was pacing in the lounge outside the ER. The older agent wasn't that much taller than Scully herself, which she had a chance to notice when he swept her into a hug. "I'm so sorry, Dana. I didn't know he was sick," Mel was apologizing over and over. Scully realized he was more in need of comforting than she was at that moment. She had been assured that her partner's vital signs were strong, that he was just unconscious -for no apparent reason. "It's OK, Mel. It's not your fault. I'm just going to let Dr. Pilsnor know that I'm here--" She had no sooner spoken the words than a young man with dark curly hair and an olive complexion pushed his way through the doors at the end of the lounge. He looked over at her and gave a brief smile. "I thought I recognized that voice. You must be Dr. Scully," he said, extending his hand in greeting. "Dr. Pilsnor, I presume," Scully returned and accepted his handshake. He nodded, dark eyes sparkling. "Your patient is back here, if you'd care to follow me--" he didn't bother to see if she was behind him, he just headed back the way he'd come. "How's he doing? Has he regained consciousness?" Scully asked, searching the empty cubicles for the one containing her partner. "Not yet. But we got some of the lab work back, and I'm getting a pretty good picture of what we're dealing with. The PET came back clean, by the way," Pilsnor said with a satisfied look back over his shoulder. "He's in here," he added, pulling the curtain away so she could enter. Mulder looked all too familiar with his eyes closed, tucked in on the gurney. Although in sleep a lot of the tiny lines she was beginning to notice on his face faded, she could still see the dark circles framing his eyes and a gaunt look to his cheeks. The doctor had started an IV, and from what she could see from the bag hanging at the siderail, he'd put in a catheter as well. She winced, Mulder was _not_ going to be happy when he woke up. "Oh, Mulder," she muttered sadly and reached over the rail to take his hand. Without thinking, she took his pulse, even though a heart monitor was beeping quietly next to his head. "I wasn't aware that the FBI had it's own staff of physicians," Pilsnor commented as he checked on some lab results that had been left in the basket at the bottom of the gurney. "I'm a pathologist," Scully said, reaching for the chart. "Uh, Dr. Scully, this man isn't in need of a pathologist--at least not for a while," Dr. Pilsnor said with his eyebrows reaching his hair line. "We're partners. We work together. For family reasons, I'm his next of kin," Scully explained. Pilsnor snatched the chart back from Scully's waiting hand. "Now, I'm really confused," he said and frowned. "You aren't his physician?" Before Scully had a chance to answer that question, a nurse entered the cubicle with another set of test results. Pilsnor read them over, then chewed on his lip a moment before handing them to Scully. She read them quickly, skipping to some values that she suspected would be present. "There's nothing here--except possibly exhaustion," she said then stopped and stared. "An ulcer?" "It does appear. The anemia clued me in to it. I've seen a lot of people come in anemic to find that they're losing blood from an ulcer. It hadn't perforated any major arteries, thank goodness, but it's been seeping blood into his stomach and intestinal tract for some time. He should have noticed it by now. He's also exhausted. I don't know what he's been doing, but it doesn't look like he's been eating or sleeping for a several days." "I should have known--" Scully muttered. "You suspected something?" Pilsnor asked. "He has had several headaches--" Scully suggested lamely. "He's been popping pills for them . . ." "There is a fairly high level of ibuprofen in his blood stream. But the PET scan showed no physiological reason for headaches. Could have been tension related. And you know that misuse of analgesics can contribute to ulcers," he commented as he took the chart back from her. "Still, he would have complained about the stomach pain before now. He's had this condition for some time." "He's not much of a complainer," Scully said through pursed lips. How long had he been suffering in silence? Was it more than a nightmare that had made him call her last night? Had he been in pain all night long but couldn't gather the courage to ask for help? It made her own stomach cramp just to think of him alone, in an empty motel room, in pain and undoubtedly frightened, with no one to turn to. "Do you believe the anemia is why he lost consciousness?" she asked abruptly, knowing that if she dwelled on her partner's agony she would only crumble herself. He needed her strength more than any thing. "That, and the exhaustion. I spoke with Agent Bocks when Agent Mulder was brought in--he's been working almost round the clock since he arrived two days ago. I know there's a killer on the loose, but don't you have more than one person who could work on this 'profile' or whatever Agent Mulder was doing?" His voice was neutral but his eyes were full of accusation. "The other profiler is sick, too," Scully explained with a shrug. "And Mulder is the best one in the Bureau. Or he was." Pilsnor gave her a confused look. "Was?" "He left that division over five years ago. It was too stressful," Scully said simply. "Well, whatever he's been doing since seems to have become 'too stressful' as well," Pilsnor said grimly. "How do you plan on treating him?" Scully asked, really wanting to get off the topic of the stressors in Mulder's life. To a large extent, she couldn't help wondering if she didn't fit in that category. "Antibiotics for the ulcer. He tested positive for Helicobacter pylori. And we'll get him started on a soft diet, use H2 blockers--the usual. We have fairly good results in as little as two to three weeks. The exhaustion--I plan on keeping him here for two nights, make sure he gets rest and nutrition. Then he's your problem," Pilsnor stated flatly. "Now, if you'll excuse me, I have other patients to check on. The nurse will be in shortly to take him up to a room." Pilsnor left, muttering to himself about 'hot shots from DC' and Scully sank into the chair next to Mulder's gurney. "Why didn't you say anything," she moaned, taking his hand again. "Mulder, you've been so distant lately, you've been so far away even when you're standing right next to me. The only time you reach out is to take my hand. You could have told me, you know. I would have helped." Her partner, as he'd been doing to the past several weeks, said nothing. He slept on. The nurse came in with two orderlies and instructions for Scully to go down to Admitting and sign the paperwork. Reluctant to leave her partner for even that short period, she went out to the waiting room and found Mel Bocks, still pacing in a corner. Mel looked up expectantly. "Good news, I hope?" he all but begged her. "Well, not exactly 'good' news, but not the worst, either. Mulder has an ulcer and he's suffering from exhaustion. The doctor here wants him to stay for the next couple of days. We'll see after that. But I'm afraid he's off the case." Mel brightened a little. "Oh, that's not a problem. We caught the guy. He was hiding in a laundry truck in the garage and they nailed him going after an undercover agent. You know, he fit Mulder's profile to a tee. It's scary, how your partner does that." "And doing 'that' is how he got sick, Mel. Or at least it's a contributing factor," Scully said glumly. She felt a twinge of guilt at the other man's crestfallen face. "I'm sorry, Mel. Please, believe me, you had nothing to do with Mulder's illness. It's been coming on for a while and I just wasn't paying attention. It's my fault, if it's anybody's." "So they're keeping him?" Mel said, adeptly changing the subject. "Oh, yes, and I need to ask a favor. I don't want him waking up alone. But the hospital wants me to fill out the admitting papers. Would you mind--" "I'm not exactly a substitute for you, Scully, but it would be my pleasure. I'll sit with him till you can get there," Mel said happily. "He'll be glad you're here. He talks about you all the time when you're not around, you know." Scully could only nod. I just wish he'd talk _to_ me when I am around, she thought sadly, and went to find the admitting office. St. Vincent's Hospital 6:35 am It had been a long and mostly sleepless night. An MRI revealed that there was more than one ulcer to worry about, one encroaching on a major blood vessel. It would be a race to keep Mulder calm and reduce the acids in his stomach before the ulcer could perforate. About midnight, the shifts changed and an over-eager resident ordered a feeding tube be inserted to supplement Mulder's IV. Scully spent the better part of the witching hour persuading the young doctor that if the intention was keeping Mulder away from stress, inserting a tube down his nose was the _last_ thing they should be doing. She finally convinced him that if they waited just a little while longer, Mulder would wake up and they could start him on the soft diet and nutritional supplements at that time, without the passive feeding instruments. It was after three before Scully was able to settle down in the reclining chair next to Mulder's bed and fall asleep. She was still pretty deep in slumber some three hours later when her partner decided to join the rest of the conscious world. She heard a rustling and a throat being cleared. Scully's eyes flew open and she saw that she was the object of a very focused gaze. "Hi," Mulder said hoarsely. He coughed and cleared his throat again. "Uh, where are we?" he asked sheepishly. "Three guesses and the first two don't count," she taunted. He rolled his eyes and she relented. "St. Vincent's Hospital, Minneapolis. You collapsed right after giving your part of the briefing last night. Scared poor Mel Bocks out of ten years growth, and we both know the man needs all the height he can get," she teased lightly. Mulder closed his eyes and rubbed his stomach lightly with his left hand, the one unencumbered with an IV. "Stomach hurt?" Scully asked. Her tone left no room for vague answers. It was her 'interrogators' voice. "A little. Just gas," Mulder muttered in return. "Well, according to the tests they ran on you, you've been having 'just gas' for several weeks. And it's burned a couple of nasty holes in your stomach," she returned tersely. He gave her a shocked look. "Ulcers? I don't have ulcers, Scully. I have a cast iron stomach, you know that," he said, shaking his head in denial. "Well, the cast iron has started to rust through," she told him firmly. "Mulder, you should have said something. I know you've probably noticed some of the signs. Did you think it would all go away?" she demanded. He looked suitable contrite during her ranting. "I didn't want to bother you, Scully. You've just gone through a bad time, medically speaking, and I didn't want to add to that--" She stared at him, exasperated. "Mulder, do you think it's bothering me to tell me when you're sick!? Why did you make me your next of kin if you won't tell me when you're having pains? And blood loss, you're anemic, too," she accused, shaking her finger toward his stomach. "I made you my next of kin because you can usually figure this stuff out before I do," he said evenly, not tearing his eyes away from her. "How am I supposed to figure it out if you won't talk to me," she shot back, raising her voice. "Mulder, you haven't said more than what was absolutely necessary for weeks," she accused. Now it was Mulder's turn to get angry. "What do you want, Scully? I can't give you any answers because you don't like the ones I give you. What the hell do you want?" Before she could answer that, he gasped with pain and curled in on himself. "shit," he mumbled to himself and clenched his eyes shut tight. Scully had just put her hand on the call button when the nurse appeared, prepared to take Mulder's vital signs. Scully was trying to get Mulder to lie back, so she could assess the pain, but he was too tightly curled up for her to move him. "Get a doctor," Scully yelled over her shoulder. "Then get in here and take his pressure. He may be bleeding." The nurse hurried out of the room and Scully turned her attention to her partner. "Mulder, listen to me. I know it hurts but you have to relax." "Easy . . . for you . . . to say," he hissed through clenched teeth. No, it's not, she thought angrily to herself. Scully was finding it very hard to relax at that moment. She was berating herself for upsetting her partner. She should never have started the argument with him. If he was bleeding, if the ulcer had perforated, she had herself to blame for it. Her own stomach was tied in knots waiting for the doctor to arrive. A young doctor she hadn't met arrived just a few seconds later. >From her appearance, Scully judged her to be another resident. She introduced herself quickly as Dr. Marrin and then started to examine the patient. The nurse pulled the curtain and escorted Scully to the hallway. "I'm a doctor, too," Scully protested, but the nurse's hand on her arm was firm. "Too many cooks, dear," she said with a kind smile. She was an older woman, probably mid fifties from the wrinkles around her eyes. Even so, Scully was not happy at being dismissed to the hallway. It seemed like an eternity before the young resident came out of the room. Scully had found a plastic waiting chair and had dragged it closer to the door, so she wouldn't miss any comings and goings. Dr. Marrin stopped next to her. "I've called down and reserved and OR. I know we were all hoping to avoid surgery, but I think he waited too long before coming in. We need to stop the bleeding. In the long run, it will probably add a few weeks to his recovery, but that might be what he needs--time to rest and relax. There's a surgical waiting room up on sixth floor, or you can wait here for him." "I'd like to be close by. I'll go upstairs and wait," Scully said quietly. "Is he still awake?" "Yes, for a little while. You can go on in until we're ready to move him." Dr. Marrin gave her a brief smile and walked on down the hall. The older nurse was injecting something, Scully figured a sedative, into Mulder's IV. He looked toward the door warily. "We can't talk them out of this?" he asked with a lop sided grin. "No, 'fraid not," she said shaking her head. "Mulder, I'm so sorry, I never should have upset you--" He reached out his free hand and she took it in her own. "Scully, you didn't give me the ulcer. You might think you did," he teased, "but you didn't. I did this to myself. I should know better by now." "Mulder, I just wish you'd told me--" "I don't suppose you could steal a scrub suit and come in the OR to watch, huh Scully?" Mulder whispered in a hoarse, sleepy voice. "Just to make sure they don't 'snip' any of the wrong parts?" She knew what he was doing, avoiding the subject again. And the way the sedative was taking effect, she didn't have much choice but to let him off the hook. She leaned over and brushed the hair off his forehead and continued to stroke his temples, watching as his eyes drifted closed as he relaxed. "Wish I could. But I only know how to take stuff 'out'--I'm not that good at putting it together," she teased lightly. "You go to sleep. I'll walk you to the OR and I'll wait outside for you. When you're done--" "--I get ice cream," he sighed sleepily. She grinned. "That's for a tonsillectomy, Mulder, not stomach surgery. I promise I'll be there when you wake up. Will that do?" "Good 'nuff," he mumbled and as the orderlies wheeled the bed out of the room, she could tell that he was well on his to sleep. end of part five ****** In The Darkness Comes A Light (6/7) by vmoseley@fgi.net disclaimed in part one 9:15 am The surgical waiting room was crowded with families of patients in elective surgeries. Scully called Mel Bocks to let him know that Mulder was being operated on. Mel was finishing up the report on the killer and promised to come by the hospital as soon as he could to keep her company. Almost as an afterthought, she remembered to call the office in DC. It was already after 10, Washington time. Kim put her through to Skinner immediately. "What are the doctors saying, Scully?" the AD asked without greeting. A man of few words, Scully thought wryly. "A combination of things, sir. For one, he's developed ulcers in the past few weeks and 'forgot' to mention it to me. In conjunction with about 4 hours of sleep in the last 72 hours, he collapsed from pain and exhaustion. He's in surgery right now, having the most serious of the ulcers repaired." She heard the AD sigh heavily. "I always thought the man was impervious to this sort of thing," he muttered, and Scully wondered if he was even speaking to her. "Well, sir, apparently not. I can't believe I didn't notice anything! I mean, I should have picked up on all the analgesics he's been popping. I know he's had tension headaches--" "You're his partner, Scully, not his keeper," Skinner gently chided. Scully flinched at his words. An easy platitude, but Skinner had been just as worried as she was, hadn't he? Weren't they both a little guilty of being 'Mulder's Keepers'--and falling down on the job when he needed them most? "How long will he be in surgery?" Skinner's voice broke through her thoughts. "About another hour or so. It's a simple operation, really and they don't expect any complications. But his recovery will be a month to six weeks." She could almost hear the Assistant Director nod grimly. "It's not going to be easy, getting him to stay down that long. Especially without the benefit of a full body cast," Skinner said dryly. "Handcuffs and leg irons might be appropriate," Scully replied in kind. "Well, keep me apprised. I understand the UNSUB has been apprehended. Tell Mulder 'good work' on the case and I hope he has a quick recovery." "Thank you, sir. I'll do that," she said and disconnected the line. She glanced up at the clock and wondered how long she'd be waiting for news. It was well past lunch time when Mulder was finally settled back in his room. Her stomach was growling so loudly Scully was getting nervous glances from the nurses who kept coming in, taking vital signs. She patently ignored the nurses and her stomach. She might be hungry, but she didn't want to leave. It was foolishness on her part, but the surgery had gone well, Mulder had woken up in the recovery room only to fall back asleep. The doctor had assured her that they had repaired two larger ulcers and the smaller one would heal nicely on it's own, provided the patient took his antibiotics and watched his diet and stress levels. That was the rub, in Scully's eyes. Watching Mulder's stress levels could be considered a full time job with lots of overtime. In the past he had handled it all, the work, the search for his sister, his parents mercurial attitudes toward him--even the derision of his colleagues. None of it got to him. He hadn't been kidding her when he'd said he had a cast iron stomach--he had a cast iron disposition to match. But apparently, somewhere, the disposition had changed. She had watched him over the past months. He still teased, he still dug into the cases with a ferocity that left her in awe. But there was something different. A sadness that wouldn't leave his eyes, a slouch to his shoulders. He had hidden it well, when she'd come home from the hospital after her remission. He'd come over several nights, cooked dinners for her. When the boredom of the doctor's imposed rest had just about driven her crazy, her charming partner had brought over files of cases to go over with her. In short, he'd been her sanity as she grappled with the very real emotions of learning that she wasn't going to die so soon. But Scully had never given much thought to the effect the events surrounding her remission had on her partner. Not until well after the fact, and by that time, it was almost a forbidden topic between them. She had sensed a change in him almost from the beginning, but assumed it was more shock at her remission and Blevins betrayal than something more personally shattering. Over time, she'd come to a realization. He had sacrificed his beliefs to obtain her cure. He no longer wanted to believe, now he was ready to deny everything he had once held on to. Now, as she was waiting for him to wake up, she wondered if he might not have traded his own life for hers. Mel Bocks came by during the afternoon. The doctor they had arrested had confessed and was now under a suicide watch. Mel was at the hospital to coordinate security and to check on the agents from DC. He came into the room carrying a bunch of multicolored balloons tied to a economy sized bottle of Tums (R). "He wake up, yet?" the older agent asked, concern lining he's already creviced face. "He's sleeping, Mel. Between the medicine he's on for the pain and the exhaustion of the last week, it's normal. He was awake after the surgery. Not for long, but long enough to complain when the nurse told him he had to have ice chips instead of the water he wanted," Scully informed the other agent with a grin. Mel grinned back. "I can't say I envy you, Dana. He's gonna be a pain in the ass when he wakes up." "I hope so," she muttered, but quickly turned to the details of the case. "So, you got a confession?" "Yep, and I already wrote a letter to AD Skinner putting in a good word for Sleeping Beauty there. I tell ya, if he hadn't shown up when he did--we'd still be scratching our ass--uh, I mean, we'd still be chasing our tails on this thing," Mel blushed slightly and shrugged. "Sure would be great to have him in the ISU full time." At Scully's icy glare, Mel hastened to amend his statement. "I mean, if you two weren't tied up with other things and all, you know, if it was something he wanted--" Scully decided not to slay Mel on the spot and gave him a break. "I know, Mel. But profiling is hard on him. You're looking at the proof." Her gaze shifted over to the hospital bed and the tubes and wires connecting Mulder to half a dozen machines and read outs. "Boy, one case can do all that?" Mel asked, surprised. He noticed the guilty look that flashed across Scully's face and chose to ignore it. "I guess it was rough on him. But he sure came through. You know, if he keeps this up, St. Paul might name a street after him," he teased. "In the cemetery district, no doubt," Scully retorted, just barely suppressing a smile. Mel's expression was of shocked surprise, until he caught on to the joke. "Yeah, hey, that'd be rich, wouldn't it?" he chuckled. "Well, I won't keep you. I have some more trees to murder tonight--you'd think if we catch the bad guy, they'd give us a break on the paperwork. I'll be by tomorrow, see how he's doing." "Thanks for stopping by, Mel. I'll be sure Mulder knows you were here." It was quiet once again. Scully made a quick glance of the monitors. His vitals were strong, just as they should have been. In the silence of the room her stomach decided to grumble loudly. "Are you gonna feed that thing?" a slurred voice asked from the bed. "Playing 'possum', Mulder?' she asked, grinning and brought the cup of ice chips over to spoon a few into his mouth. He must have heard the sound of styrofoam, because he opened his mouth, but kept his eyes closed. After a few spoonfuls, he swallowed and cleared his throat. "Scully, you don't have to sit there. I'm not in ICU, I'm not on life supports. I'm fine. Go, eat. Consider it a direct order, if you must." "How long have you been awake?" she asked, ducking his order. "Long enough to know I don't want a street named after me," he replied dryly, finally cracking one eye open to glare fuzzily at her. "And I'm not going back to Investigative Support Unit, either." "Good," she replied casually. "I think I might have some objections to that, too." He shifted in the bed and then stopped when moving caused some pain. "ouch," he let out with a wince. "You're probably due for a shot. Want me to call the nurse?" "Yeah, sure, I just love shots, Scully. You know how I love shots," he sneered sarcastically, but another shot of pain stopped him short. "Maybe you better," he sighed, reluctantly. "Tell you what, you take the shot, and get some sleep. In the meantime, I'll get some lunch. Deal?" "When do I get some lunch?" he pouted. "Tomorrow," she happily informed him. "Stomach surgery, Mulder. Ice chips, then water, then--" "Jello," he said with disgust. "Maybe ice cream," she offered, but at his excited nod, she touched his shoulder, "IF you're good." He rolled his eyes to the ceiling and she grinned at him. "What constitutes 'good'?" he whined. "Being nice to the nurses, doing what you're told and not being a pain," she clicked off her fingers. "Might as well get the shot now," he grumbled. "I think I want to sleep through the next 24 hours." end of part 6 ***** In The Darkness Comes A Light (7/7) by vmoseley@fgi.net disclaimed in part one the next day 10:15 am Mulder had been true to his word and slept for the next 19 hours straight. After a slight 'discussion' with the floor nurse, Scully had been convinced to go back to his motel. She'd eaten in the coffee shop, gone up and collapsed on the bed, sleeping until almost 9 am. It was the most sleep she'd had in a long time. She felt rested, relaxed. But as she stood in the shower, she gathered the courage to bring up the subject she knew Mulder was desperately trying to avoid. It was bright and sunny on the way to the hospital. It looked like spring would be coming early, after all. Scully found a convenience store and ran inside, found what she wanted and then hurried on her way. Scully peeked around the partially open door. Mulder was sitting up a little, remote in hand, blinking in time to the flashing pictures on the television screen. "They're going to find out that is a major cause of blindness," she teased as she pushed the door the rest of the way open and came in. "Nah, if 'they' were right, I'd be blind already," he joked back. "What did you bring me?" he asked, his eyes lighting on the bag she carried. "First, were you a good boy?" she asked in a sing song voice. "I was asleep. But I was great in my dreams," he leered and then grinned as she tried to hold her own smile back. "OK, but it comes with a price tag," she said, handing the bag to him and pulling the tray table over so he could place his 'treasure' on it. "Frozen yogurt?" he said with mild disgust. "What, they ran out of Chunky Monkey?" "Easier on your stomach. We'll work you up to Chunky Monkey in a few days," she smiled. It obviously didn't bother him too much, because in a split second he had the lid off the container and was spooning large portions into his mouth. He closed his eyes and smiled blissfully. "Thully, yo th' bessss," he murmured around another mouthful. "I hope you think so later," she muttered. "Mulder, we need to talk." At the tone of her voice, he dug a little more slowly into the container, swishing the last mouthful around on his tongue a while. He finally looked her directly in the eyes and swallowed. "About?" "The last few months," she said evenly, not really knowing how else to put it. "Life, the Universe and Everything?" he quoted, sticking the plastic spoon back in the container and pushing it the side of the table. "Scully--I know what you're thinking . . ." "Well, that's good, because I don't have a clue as to what you're thinking," she shot back and regretted it when she saw the hurt expression that flashed in his eyes. "Mulder, you scared me. Now, I know you have a habit of doing that. Hell, I think you've elevated it to a 'hobby' at this point. But this time you weren't injured by an outside force. This time you were injured because of what you were keeping bottled up inside you. And that worries me, more than all the sewer monsters, blood suckers and mothmen combined." "I've been working through some things," he said sullenly, toying with the spoon and the container again, but not bothering to eat anymore. "Not very effectively, from where I'm sitting," she told him plainly. His sigh was the only answer he gave her. "Mulder, I know a lot has happened lately--" "You think I've lost my way," he said quietly, still not looking up. "I know that you seem lost. I know that you are doing things and saying things I never thought I'd hear out of your mouth--" "People change, Scully," he said, finally looking at her. "If I believed that was what was happening to you, I'd feel a whole lot better," she said, getting up out of the chair she was sitting on and perching on the edge of the bed. In a moment, she was holding his hand in hers, a perfect mirror image of the many times he'd visited her during her last hospital stay. "Mulder, this . . . this 'new you'--it isn't the Mulder I know. You're not happy with it, either. And your body is taking out a billboard in your stomach to prove that point." "It was worth it," he said, jumping ahead of the conversation. He was once again avoiding her gaze, choosing to inspect their entwined hands. "What? What was worth it?" she asked, squeezing his fingers in the hopes of getting him to look at her again. When he did raise his eyes to her, her heart almost broke in two. "You're here. You're better. It was worth it," he said, so plainly that it could have been a mantra. Tears burned at her throat but she swallowed them back. "Mulder. I never wanted to hurt you--" He brought her hand up and kissed it gently. "I know that. You didn't hurt me, Scully. Not you. All you did was help me see the truth. I don't blame you. I blame them." He dropped their combined hands and looked away again. "I blame myself for believing the lies for so long." "Mulder, I don't know that it was all lies," Scully whispered hoarsely, the tears so close to the surface that they were breaking through her voice. He looked at her for a moment, unshed tears in his own eyes. "I don't know what I saw in that truck. I saw something, Scully. I don't know what. And that's been eating at me. Just like the whole chimera thing has been eating at me. It's like I have no basis, no foundation anymore. Nothing to frame the discussion, no rules to the game. That's what's been hurting so much. That's what ripped holes in my gut." He leaned back against the pillows, but didn't let loose of her hand. "All my life, Scully, things have been hidden from me. I hated it. You once told me that if I was dropped in the middle of the desert and told 'the truth is out there' that I would calmly ask for a spoon," he said, and smiled with her at the memory of that moment. "But the truth of the matter is, I've never had any other way of finding out. I've never been given information, I've always had to dig for it, steal it, sneak it out from under their noses. And now I find out that so much of what I worked so hard to get was false--how is that supposed to make me feel?" She knew better than to answer, it was a question she had no answer for, anyway. She just squeezed his hand and let him speak. "He brought a woman to me." At her raised eyebrow, he had the courage to chuckle. "Not a date, Scully," he chided, then grew serious. "He said it was her. He told me it was Samantha." Scully's eyes grew wide as the words slammed their meaning home to her. "Mulder--when--how?" she demanded. "The night after they put the chip back in your neck. You were still so weak. I didn't think . . . I mean, I'd hoped it would work right away, you know," he said, tears welling in his eyes again. "It did work right away, Mulder," she whispered. "We just didn't know it was working." "Precisely. Anyway, he, the smoking man, he brought a woman to a diner and she looked just like the clones we'd met before. And she seemed so real, Scully. So real." He reached up and angrily wiped at a stray trickle that had escaped his left eye. "I believed it was her--Sam. At that moment, in that diner, I believed." "What happened?" Scully begged, not bothering to wipe away her own tears. "She talked to me. Told me that she thought I was dead--that Mom and Dad and I had died the night she was taken. She said that he, the smoking man, had raised her as a daughter. That she was his daughter. His and Mom's. Scully, the story fit. I mean, it wasn't what I believed had happened, it wasn't what I'd learned when I'd been regressed, but it seemed to fit, somehow." He closed his eyes and gathered his thoughts before continuing. "I asked her why she'd come. She said that 'her father' had told her I had just recently been looking for her. I tried to tell her that he'd lied to her, that I'd never stopped looking and he'd known that for a long time. She wouldn't believe it. It scared her. I told her Mom was alive and she couldn't handle it. It was too much." He opened his eyes and the pain there was more than Scully thought she could bear. "She said she needed time. That she had a life, a family, children. She didn't know what to do. She refused to give me her name or tell me how to get hold of her. I held her hand, I didn't want to let go . . ." Scully leaned over and took him in her arms. He cried for some time against her shoulder. "Why didn't you tell me this," she asked, gently, not wanting to accuse, but wondering why. "I tried. That night. I came to your room. But Scully, you were sleeping and I didn't have . . . I didn't have the heart to wake you. I didn't want to burden you with it all. I was afraid . . . afraid that it would be our . . . our last . . ." He stopped and pulled away from her, embarrassed by his own lapse of faith. He drew in a deep breath and looked off, away from her face. "The next day, I just didn't think about it. And all hell broke loose at the office. After the meeting where I fingered Blevins, your mom called and told me to get to the hospital as soon as possible. She wouldn't tell me over the phone and I was sure you were . . . Well, anyway, I got there and you told me about the remission." "That night, Mulder. Why didn't you say something that night? You sat in my room for over an hour and just smiled at me." She grinned as she remembered thinking that nothing could have equaled the smile on his face after she'd told him the news. "I had already started to question that she was really Samantha. I mean, it was too pat, Scully. Too perfect an explanation. Sure, it looked like Samantha, I guess. I have no way of knowing. I've seen pictures of my mother when she was young and this woman sort of looked like those pictures, but, Scully, why then? Why bring her out then? To try and entice me to--" He stopped short, not wanting to go further. She caught the slip. She pulled her hand from his grasp. "He wanted you to make a deal--he was going to trade Samantha for you," she said, straining against her growing anger. "I didn't. I didn't do it, Scully. I swear--I swear on your life I didn't make any deals." She stared long and hard at him, watching for any flinch in his gaze. He stared resolutely back at her. Finally, she relaxed. This time it was his turn to take her hand. "What happened. Tell me everything," she demanded. "Not much else to tell. I came to see you before the meeting, fully expecting to be arrested for murder when I arrived at the office. Instead, I saw an opportunity, put a couple of things together, and turned the tables on the rat in the house. Blevins jumped up, ran out and fifteen minutes later, his secretary was sobbing outside his office door and the guards were busting the door in. He'd killed himself. I got the call to come to the hospital and you know the rest." "Was that woman Samantha? You don't sound so sure," Scully said quietly. "No, like I said, it was too easy. Give me the taste, get me hooked and then reel me in with her as the bait. I didn't think she could do that, no matter what might have happened in the last 20 years. Not Sam. She'd have given me some clue, some indication that there was a trap involved. This woman was a damned good actress, that's all." "Still, it must have hurt you terribly," Scully sighed and he looked at her, a little amazed that she understood so completely. "What really hurt was how easily I fell for the trap at first. I was so ready to believe it was over, that I'd finally found her. Even if it meant that she rejected me, betrayed me. I didn't care. I just want to get on with my life." "Your life," Scully muttered, under her breath. "Why didn't you tell me all this sooner?" He shrugged. "It never came up?" he tried lamely. "I don't know, Scully. There didn't seem to be time. Or the right time. I mean, when would have been a good time to have this discussion? After Emily's funeral? Oh, by the way, I almost thought I'd found Sam but it was a lie? Come on, Scully. I couldn't do that to you." "No, you'd rather bleed internally," she shot back, defensively. He flinched and she relented. "I'm sorry, Mulder, but give me a break. You can't keep doing this to yourself. If I'm your partner, you have to trust me to help you sometimes." "I do," he whispered. "You help me all the time." "Then let me help you now," she said softly and let go of his hand long enough to reach behind her head. Carefully, she unclasped the chain of the cross she always wore and in one swift motion, placed it tenderly around his neck. "Scully?" he said in confusion. "What are you doing? This is yours. It's your faith." She shook her head. "No, Mulder. I thought it was just a memory, but my faith is inside me, now. See, one thing my cancer taught me is that science and faith are not necessarily mutually exclusive. You can have both. Oh, I'm still going to rely on science, but now I have something else to bolster me in those moments that science can't give me the answers. I want to give that to you. I want to give you faith again." He reached up and touched her cheek. "I never really lost faith in one thing, Scully. Us. Our ability to find the truth, to beat the odds, to do anything we put our minds to." She covered his hand with her own. "I know you didn't. But I think you just realized that yourself, didn't you?" she accused. He chuckled softly. "Yeah, maybe." He sighed again, his eyes drooping closed. She smiled and reached over to lower the bed and then pulled the blankets up around him in a motherly gesture. "This is tiring stuff and you still need to rest. Take a nap." One eye popped open. "I suppose you have some place else to be," he said hesitantly. She smiled at him. "Not that I can think of. You want me to stay?" "I'm boring when I sleep, Scully," he told her honestly. "Let me be the judge of that," she grinned. "Besides, I brought something to read." She reached into her purse and pulled out a paperback, showing him the title. "_Breakfast at Tiffanys_? Haven't you finished that yet?!" "I keep getting interrupted," she shrugged. "I can tell you how it ends," he offered. She shook her head firmly. "Go to sleep, Mulder." He reached up and lightly fingered the tiny gold cross at his neck. "Your mom is gonna think you converted me," he said, already drifting off. "I don't think it was you who did the converting, Mulder. Now sleep." Scully watched him for a long time, his soft snoring playing counterpoint to the other hospital sounds. He seemed more peaceful now and after a while, she found herself relaxing and drifting off to sleep. the end. Vickie "Your ability to juggle many tasks will take you far." My fortune cookie, Feb. 28, 1998