319 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
319 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
From: shan@nyx10.cs.du.edu (Steven Han)
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Date: 12 Aug 1994 10:40:04 -0600
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Hi all,
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I was so moved by Sarah Stegall's story 'Grey Fox' that I felt inspired to
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write a similar story, but one told from a somewhat different perspective.
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Now I'll be the first to admit that my writing isn't anywhere near as
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good as Sarah's, so I hope you'll bear with me as I attempt put my thoughts
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to paper. Just consider these the ramblings of a bored X-fan waiting
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patiently for the second season. :^)
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BTW, in addition to Sarah's piece, this story was also inspired by the
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10,000 Maniacs song "Tension Makes a Tangle". If you've heard the song,
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you'll understand what I mean; if you haven't, I highly recommend you try
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listening to it sometime.
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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"A Christening"
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Dana Scully sat in her rocking chair, contemplating the pomp and ceremony
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that would be forthcoming this day. Her newest great-grandson would be
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christened today, with a big feast planned afterwards. The entire extended
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family would be arriving at her house to celebrate and renew old ties.
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At the ripe old age of eighty-four, Dana had become the de facto matriarch
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of her family. With four children, twelve grandchildren, and now seven
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great-grandchildren, she had plenty to show for her years. Her precious
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offspring looked up to her as their spiritual and family center, a pillar
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of strength that had held the family together through numerous difficult
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and trying periods.
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Dana had eschewed modern amenities in her home, choosing instead to live a
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simple and traditional lifestyle. Fortunately, even at her age she managed
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to stay reasonably active. Though living alone in the old house, she took
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pride in her ability to function as well as a person two decades younger.
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Her daughters would be coming over soon to help with the meals, but she
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had insisted on preparing the main dish herself, her famous rack of lamb.
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The thought of seeing three generations of her offspring gathered together
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in her home warmed her heart. She looked forward to seeing faces she
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saw no more than once a year, and some she hadn't seen in over a decade.
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She thought of the pitter patter of tiny feet that would soon be running
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through her house, yelling and screaming, in an exuberant display of
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youthful energy. She thought back to the days when a family gathering
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meant bringing a few children and grandchildren together. Even earlier
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than that, she recalled the times when it was just her and her husband and
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their four kids.
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Her husband - dear John, she didn't think about him much these days; it had
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been so long since had passed on. He was a good man, a caring father and
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husband, always loyal and comforting. Though there had been times she
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had questioned some of her decisions in life, she could never blame him
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for her doubts. He had always been there for her, there had been no reason
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for her to be unhappy. And yet, there were still those nagging thoughts,
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questions she could not think to ponder, of whether things could have been
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different, how everything would have turned out...
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She began to hark back to those days, the days of her youth, when the
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future seemed so open and limitless, and thoughts of children and
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grandchildren were the furthest things from her mind. She recalled her
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time in the bureau, those wonderful years of service and adventure.
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She looked over at the wall of her den, at the framed award of merit
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signed by the director himself. Her eyes moved along the wall, to gaze at
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the certificate crediting her years of service, as she remembered the
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ceremony that accompanied the note. "Ten years of honorable service, one
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our finest agents", she recalled the deputy director saying, as she said
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goodbye to friends and colleagues to raise a family.
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Sighing at the fond memories, She remembered the momentos hidden away in
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cardboard boxes. It had been years since she had opened them; perhaps a
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few years too long, she thought.
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Getting up slowly from her chair, she made her way over to the closet.
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She knelt down and began pulling boxes of old clothes out of the way. She
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noticed one of the boxes was half open, and lifted up the flap.
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Looking inside, she found an old blue dress, at least forty years old.
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It brought back a flood of memories, like the time she wore it to her
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college reunion, where she met a long-lost friend who had moved to Europe.
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Or the time she wore the dress to a church picnic, where her daughter
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skinned her knee from playing volleyball. And even the time way back when
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she first bought the dress, how she thought modern fashion had become so
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radical.
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The dress looked rather tame to her now. Of course, by now she had seen
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everything, and nothing surprised her anymore. She put the dress back in
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the box and struggled to push it out of the way.
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Her strength was not what it used to be, and moving heavy boxes was no work
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for an elderly lady. Still, she eventually managed to get at the wrinkled,
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yellowing cardboard box with the letters 'FBI' labeled in magic markers.
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Sitting down on the carpet, she pulled the treasured box towards her. The
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box had been opened and closed back up many times before, as evidenced by
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the shredded tape and wrinkle marks on the cover flaps. Drawing a deep
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breath, she blew away the dust from the top of the box, and gently pulled
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the flaps back one by one.
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She reached in and pulled out her old FBI wallet, still bearing her photo
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from nearly sixty years ago. The badges were normally turned in upon an
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agent's leaving the bureau, but she had managed to finagle a duplicate from
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a friend who owed her a favor.
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She looked at the picture of the young auburn-headed woman in her mid
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twenties, still finding it a bit difficult to believe it was her. She had
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changed so much in the years since, what with four deliveries, the gray
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hair, and the soft wrinkle lines on her forehead. But apart from the
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purely physical changes, she had undergone a profound emotional and
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psychological transformation since the time the photograph had been taken.
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She had entered the bureau straight out of medical school, her head full
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of textbook knowledge but still very naive of the real-world mysteries that
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were to confront her. She had been so innocent in the ways of the world
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back then, she recalled. So unaware of the forces that held sway over
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everyone's lives, dark and sinister forces, both natural and man-made. It
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had only been her association with agent Mulder that had taught her to open
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her mind to new possibilities, to alternate explanations to the seemingly
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unanswerable questions that arose in their line of work.
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Agent Mulder... Fox Mulder... it had been so long, so very long since they
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had been a team. She had tried not to think too much of him after they had
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been separated. It was simply too painful at first, losing her only beacon
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in a hopelessly confusing world of mystery and deception. Mulder had been
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the one constant in her life, the only one whom she could totally and
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unequivocally trust with everything, the only one who had always understood
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her fears and hopes.
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She had been skeptical at first, when she first met him. His total
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devotion to his work, his fanatical belief in the illogical, the
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unnatural, the unscientific. Such qualities indicated a troubled and
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delusional personality, she thought. He was to be watched over and studied,
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and restrained and curtailed, if he got out of hand. But not much more.
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But then, she slowly began to understand, to share in his perceptions. His
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rantings and ravings actually began to take on meaning, and his wild
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explanations began to make more sense. At first, she didn't want to
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believe. Her scientific training simply precluded her believing any of
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Mulder's explanations. But as time passed, she could not continue to ignore
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the strange happenings, the mounting body of evidence.
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Then she was afraid to believe. What if I became another believer,
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like Mulder? What were the implications? It would mean rejecting
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everything she had been taught, everything she had believed in. Accepting
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Mulder's viewpoint would mean rejecting the Bureau, the loss of her
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professional reputation, possibly the end of her career, her entire life
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as she knew it. Her world would come crashing down around her; the very
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foundations of her existence would simply collapse. No, she could not let
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that happen, she thought; she would try and rationalize everything away
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with a scientific explanation, no matter how unlikely.
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But she finally had to give in, amidst all the mounting evidence. There had
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come a time when she could deny herself no longer. She could only go so
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far in telling herself that her eyes deceived her; she could only come
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up with so many implausible scientific explanations for the things she had
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seen. At some point, she had to accept the impossible, to have the faith
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and courage to move beyond textbook logic. And once she had, there was no
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going back.
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It was shortly after that time that she and Mulder had been broken up as
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a team. They continued to work together from time to time, but not
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officially as part of the X-Files. That department had been buried under a
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huge pile of bureaucratic red tape, and they would never conduct another
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serious X investigation again.
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She recalled the anger and frustration Mulder felt, and how she had felt
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it too. But she kept her anger subdued, repressed. She was too much of a
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professional, too well trained to complain. She recalled at that time
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how she finally understood Mulder's degree of dedication, his love for
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his work.
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Never before, and never since, had she encountered such a person. Such
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total, selfless dedication and devotion to a field, such an immersion of
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himself into the pursuit of truth. She revered him, almost worshipped
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him in a way. He had such an absolute, single-minded sense of purpose,
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seemingly overcoming all obstacles in his path by sheer force of will. She
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found his cause to evoke a sense of spirituality - not in a religious way,
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but perhaps rather a call to a higher purpose, one which transcended mere
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criminal codes and petty bureau politics.
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Was it a search for truth, or justice, or of the unknown? or was it simply
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the search itself that gave the quest meaning? She had never really figured
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out the answer, but she thought Mulder had, though he never really shared
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it with her. She had asked him once just what his fascination was with
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discovering answers to the unknown, and why he was willing to put up with
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all the headaches and roadblocks that others threw in his path. He had
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simply replied in his wry Mulderesque tone, "Because, Scully, just because."
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As it happened, she had felt a deep sense of emptiness inside her after the
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X-Files was shut down. Not just the tangible loss of the camaraderie that
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had been built up between herself and Mulder, but something more. The sense
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of gravity, the urgency, the sheer sense of mission that had accompanied
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her work on the X-Files was missing. Whether she was tracking down
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serial killers or international terrorists, the new cases she was
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assigned to seemed empty and lifeless compared to the X-Files; she felt as
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if she had lost her soul.
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Scully paused from her thoughts to look down at the box sitting in front
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of her, full of momentos and souvenirs. Almost unconsciously, she
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began looking for a picture of Mulder. She fumbled through commemorative
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pins, paperweights, a bureau baseball cap, and... a yellowing black and
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white photograph with curled-up corners.
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She recalled the moment when she took the picture of him, back then.
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It was during the heyday of the X-Files, when they were investigating
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UFO sightings in North Carolina. She remembered they were inspecting
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tracks in an area near a dirt road, and she was taking photos of depressions
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in the soft clay. Just out of a whim, she had turned the camera in
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Mulder's direction, and catching him in a rare smile, snapped him up with
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the camera.
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The picture captured Mulder in a 3/4 length shot, wearing his dark grey
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suit, black tie, and black overcoat. His right hand was on his hip, and
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his left hand pointed in the direction of a hypothetical alien craft. He
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had just turned his head in her direction, and seen her pointing the camera
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towards him. She remembered his tall, lanky figure standing there by the
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side of the road, a physical and psychological magnet for her during those
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wonderful yet trying times.
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She brought the photograph up closer to her eyes, so she could better
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observe the expression on Mulder's face. His face - that unmistakable
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square profile with rounded jaws, with the soft lines that reminded one of
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a lost puppy. His soulful dark brown eyes that radiated intelligence and
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cried out sensitivity at the same time. His brown hair, always appearing
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tousled but natural, completing the look. Sensitive yet courageous,
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wondrous yet determined, warm yet intense, was the face she remembered.
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With a soft, nearly silent sigh, she lowered the picture from her face.
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Putting it back down on the box, she sat there transfixed at the picture,
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as she returned to her moment of reminiscence.
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After the breakup of the X-Files, she and Mulder had started to drift
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further and further apart. She went off to work in Forensics for a while,
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and he went back to putting his degree to work developing criminal profiles.
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Although the separation had been painful, like the loss of an arm, the body
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and mind began to heal, closing the wound over time. Eventually, she began
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to displace him almost completely from her mind, preferring to close the
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painful chapter of her life rather than continue to relive it over and over
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again.
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That was about the time when she had met John. He was a shy colleague at
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first, too nervous to even ask her out. But as they developed their
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friendship over time, she came to appreciate him as a solid, honest man, a
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comforting sight in a world of uncertainty. Perhaps it had been her loss
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of one confidant in her life that caused her to seek out another. But
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whatever it was, she was drawn to this man, perhaps less out of love and
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more out of a need for constancy and stability, a companion in world of
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solitude, a kind heart in a world of pain and despair.
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She had been a good wife, and he had been a good husband, and they had
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by all accounts had a successful marriage, producing numerous children and
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grandchildren. As John continued his career at the bureau, she had
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devoted herself to raising the kids, and started a new career writing
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childrens' books. She had been happy in this life, insomuch as one could
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define happiness. Was it a sense of contentment? or a lack of sorrow? if
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that was the case, she had indeed been happy. Even with the passing of her
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husband fifteen years ago, she had continued to stay busy with her work
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and hobbies, and her role as the family's matriarchal patron.
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But even after all these productive years, she could never quite dismiss
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the small, lingering thought in the back of her mind, the one that had
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stuck with her all these years. She could never voice the thought; she
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didn't dare - to even think it aloud could shake the very foundation of
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her life, her very existence. She found it amusing that she was having the
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same fears now that she had when she was investigating the X-Files. Do I
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want to think about this; do I want to even consider the possibility of
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what might have been, and the consequences that would have arisen...
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Time had such a way of clouding memories, she thought. What was it she
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had really felt back then? Was there some special, magical feeling between
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the two of them, or was it just a sense of camaraderie? She tried to sift
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through decades of memories, through the murky layers of faces and voices,
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sights and sounds, things and places. Images and scenes from her past
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came and went, juxtaposed with thoughts of what life might have been like
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for her, had things worked out differently. Quick, was that a memory of a
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long lost moment, or was it just a flashing thought? It all seemed so hazy.
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It was no use, trying to dig up fifty-year old memories. Anything she
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tried to remember would be clouded by decades of thought anyway. She
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recalled how she once believed she had such a good memory of events, only
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to discover later that she had been completely wrong. She had found that
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her memories had been colored and tinged with thoughts and desires about
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what could have happened, what should have happened, and how things could
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have turned out differently. Our minds have a way of remembering only the
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things we want to remember, the way we want to remember them, she thought.
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Perhaps that was happening all over again, she wondered with a smile.
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Still, she couldn't help trying to bring back those memories. Perhaps
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replaying scenes in her mind would help, uncovering a trace of a picture
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or sound that had been lost somewhere, gathering dust in the back of her
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mind, waiting to be opened up again someday. She closed her eyes looked
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around, searching in the darkness for some familiar bearing, a familiar
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face, a familiar thought.
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But it was all to no avail. The harder she tried to remember, the more
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the memories seemed to close up upon themselves, jealously guarding their
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secrets. She would have to leave the reminiscing to another day.
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Scully heard the doorbell, as the first of her children's families arrived
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for the joyous occasion. She put back the photo and the wallet, and pushed
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the box back in the closet. Sighing, she got up to answer the door.
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THE END
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--
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Steven Han - shan@nyx.cs.du.edu - finger for PGP key
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Insert apologetic excuse for not having a .sig here
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