1587 lines
94 KiB
Plaintext
1587 lines
94 KiB
Plaintext
4:38 p.m., July 8 1994
|
|
Washington D.C.
|
|
|
|
"Waiting for the five o'clock bell, I see."
|
|
Fox Mulder was walking down a dingy government hall with a black gym
|
|
back over one shoulder; he wore jeans and a Georgetown t-shirt.
|
|
Dana Scully, immaculately businesslike in a beige suit, folded her arms
|
|
in front of her and surveyed him. "Hot game of basketball downtown? Or do you
|
|
actually have a date?"
|
|
Mulder offered half of a smile and rattled his car keys. "Going to
|
|
visit a friend in Philly. Asked me to look into something a little odd up
|
|
there."
|
|
"Really? That's good, Mulder. I'm glad to see you're getting out of the
|
|
department's basement and out of the house all at the same time." She gave him
|
|
a full smile in return. "How are you holding up?"
|
|
"Oh, you know. They can't keep me down there much longer. They're
|
|
running out of tape."
|
|
Scully nodded, looked up at Mulder with a look that let him know she
|
|
was serious. "You think you'll get reassigned soon?"
|
|
"I've gotta, Scully." Rattling the car keys again he looked away, then
|
|
looked back. "Hey, do you want to come? Sleep on the floor? See a few bars?
|
|
Live the bohemian life?"
|
|
"You're going to Philly to check out the bars?"
|
|
"No, a *demon.* Wooooooo. Spooky, huh? Want to come?"
|
|
"Let's assume you're kidding. For all you know, I have a date, anyway."
|
|
Intrigued, Mulder widened his eyes. "*Have* you got a date?"
|
|
"Aren't you late yet? It's just past five."
|
|
"Come on, Scully, you can help me find 513 South Street. That's where
|
|
all the hippies meet, you know."
|
|
"Hippie demons. I think I'll pass. "Witness" is on Cinemax tonight."
|
|
Thumbing the manila folder she held she added, "It'll be awhile before I leave
|
|
today, anyway."
|
|
"Life is short. Drive fast. Leave a good-looking ghost." Mulder saluted
|
|
and shoved his way through a fire door into the stairwell.
|
|
|
|
It was six fifteen before Scully returned to her car after dropping off
|
|
the files from Quantico and discussing the Wigmore autopsy with Carlton. Within
|
|
the hour she was home, hitting the "play" button on her answering machine and
|
|
kicking off her shoes.
|
|
"Hi Sis. You'll never guess what I've got -- the mumps. Isn't that a
|
|
scream? I thought you could only get that when you were a kid. No Les Mis for
|
|
us tonight. Call me; I'll be home, obviously -- and yes, I have seen a doctor.
|
|
Sorry to spoil your fun. If you know someone who can use the tickets, call me
|
|
quick."
|
|
Pouting, Scully dropped into an easy chair. Damn. No luck. If only
|
|
Mulder weren't zipping up 95 in search of poltergeists, she might try to talk
|
|
him into it, but as it was --
|
|
She could go out and get a pint of Ben & Jerry's and watch whatever was
|
|
on Cinemax after all, or -- what?
|
|
She could get into her car and go whizzing up 95 right after him.
|
|
Dana glanced at her watch. Just past seven already. Certainly a
|
|
three-hour drive; then where to stay?
|
|
"Oh what the hell," she said out loud and went to her room to find a
|
|
pair of jeans and a bag to put them in.
|
|
|
|
|
|
DANCE
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
An X-Files Story
|
|
starring
|
|
David Duchovny as Special Agent Fox Mulder
|
|
Gillian Anderson as Special Agent Dana Scully
|
|
Guest Starring:
|
|
|
|
Based on the characters and premises of Chris Carter
|
|
written by Judith Tabron (tabron@binah.cc.brandeis.edu)
|
|
Not for profit; redistribute only in its entirety
|
|
Copyright Ten Thirteen Productions
|
|
THE TRUTH IS OUT THERE
|
|
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
10:46 a.m., July 9 1994
|
|
Philadelphia, PA
|
|
|
|
|
|
Scully drove away from the Mariott with a full stomach, the golden
|
|
light of the rising sun behind her as she bullied her way into traffic on the
|
|
Schuylkil Expressway. What a completely odd way to spend a Saturday, she
|
|
thought, but she was having fun so far. She'd enjoyed slobbing late in bed,
|
|
eating a room service breakfast and watching cartoons. Traveling was one of the
|
|
things she liked most about her job; she loved waking up in a room and knowing
|
|
someone else was going to make the bed. She hoped that delightfully wicked
|
|
feeling never wore off.
|
|
South Street wasn't hard to find; the exit was clearly marked. Parking
|
|
_was_ hard to find; eventually Scully resorted to following around a little old
|
|
lady with a shopping bag and grabbing her parking spot like a vulture when the
|
|
lady finally managed to locate, and get moving, her huge Oldsmobile.
|
|
As she wandered down South Street Scully had the impression of a closed
|
|
carnival. Popcorn and sticky stains scattered across the sidewalk; scraps of
|
|
paper, soda cans and fake flowers in a garbage can; neon signs dark shades of
|
|
colors, still off. People were walking about, but slowly, in and out of diners,
|
|
opening store doors. Scully checked her watch; just past eleven.
|
|
A slight nagging feeling of embarrassment began to bother her. How was
|
|
she going to find Mulder? This was a city, for god's sake, not the corner
|
|
drugstore, and she couldn't remember even the address he'd rattled off at her.
|
|
Two something? Five something, that was it. Well, that was a whole block of
|
|
stores full of people to ask if they knew someone named Fox Mulder. That ought
|
|
to give them a laugh.
|
|
Showcase Comics looked open. Dana opened the door, setting a bell
|
|
tinkling.
|
|
Behind the counter perched a woman on a high stool, perusing a comic
|
|
book open on the glass case in front of her. An unfashionably long, thick mane
|
|
of wavy dark hair fell around her bare shoulders and very fashionable
|
|
crazy-quilt vest. A pang of jealousy made Dana smooth down her shoulder-length
|
|
hair and tug at the t-shirt she was wearing.
|
|
"Can I help you?" asked the woman.
|
|
"Uh, I..." Could she fabricate a product she might be looking for in a
|
|
comic book store? Scully cast an eye over the racks on her left. Titles like
|
|
"Bone", "The Sandman," and "Omaha the Cat-Dancer" stared back at her. Nope, she
|
|
couldn't. "I'm looking for a friend of mine, actually, I was wondering if you
|
|
might have seen him?"
|
|
"Actually, we just opened. I haven't had anyone in yet today."
|
|
"Oh, I... thanks anyway."
|
|
Back on the street Dana had to laugh at herself. What was she doing? It
|
|
was a warm July day and she was wandering around a city she didn't know looking
|
|
for someone she wasn't even sure was there.
|
|
But the breeze was wonderful, more people were beginning to click up
|
|
and down the pavement, and a dozen windows filled with intriguing junk spread
|
|
out before her. Fox Mulder is not necessarily your goal, she reminded herself.
|
|
Having fun is.
|
|
|
|
"Another waffle, Mulder?"
|
|
"No thanks, I couldn't, I..."
|
|
But it was too late; the big man bounded away, bouncing along the hall
|
|
like a huge crazed balloon, sticky plate in one hand and spatula in the other.
|
|
"Is he always like this?" Mulder asked the woman across the table from
|
|
him.
|
|
"Yes. Terrifying, isn't it?" She leaned back in her chair, folding her
|
|
arms across her stomach just under her breasts and grinning at Mulder. "He
|
|
genuinely loves to cook, especially Saturday morning brunch. I've asked him to
|
|
locate the gene; hopefully gene therapy will produce an entire generation of
|
|
men like him."
|
|
"Eehhhg. Too early in the morning for thoughts like that."
|
|
Phillip careered back down the hallway, waffle-engorged plate carefully
|
|
balanced in one hand; he deposited it successfully in front of Mulder then
|
|
disappeared back down the hall.
|
|
"Are you gonna help me eat this or what?" Mulder gestured at his plate.
|
|
"Sure." She picked up her fork and commenced picking at his waffle.
|
|
"Besides, he's glad you came, Mulder."
|
|
He shrugged. "I owed you one."
|
|
"Yeah, well, I wish you still did." She grinned around a mouthful of
|
|
waffle; then the grin fled as a small frown formed between her eyebrows. "You
|
|
really don't have to do this, you know. In a way, it's no big deal."
|
|
Mulder looked levelly at his friend across the table. "A friend of
|
|
yours is dead. That's a big enough deal."
|
|
"He wasn't a close friend -- sort of a friend of a friend --" She was
|
|
looking out the window at the rooftops of downtown Philadelphia.
|
|
"Hey." She looked back at Mulder. He said, "It's not like you can
|
|
measure friendship with a ruler, Carey."
|
|
"Thank you, Mr. Saying-A-Day." She shoved the waffle back onto his
|
|
plate in sudden bad humor. "Yeah, well, whatever."
|
|
"They know who did it, don't they?" Mulder ran his left hand, still
|
|
free of syrup, through his standing-up hair and squinted out the window at the
|
|
sunny morning.
|
|
"Oh sure, they know. And if you find out anything, it's not going to be
|
|
admissible in court, anyway."
|
|
He rubbed the bridge of his nose with one fingertip, looking at her. A
|
|
thin black cotton blouse draped her broad shoulders, unbuttoned enough to
|
|
reveal a drop of sweat, the first of the July day, trickling down between her
|
|
breasts; a voluminous hot-pink skirt draped to her calves; her bare feet were
|
|
propped up on a chair; her nails were painted neon orange. Her hair, dark
|
|
brown, fell nearly to her waist and had a bright blue streak dyed in it. She
|
|
was a big heavy woman and her toes showed it; they looked like they belonged on
|
|
the ground.
|
|
"No, it certainly wouldn't be admissible in court."
|
|
Carey smiled again, just briefly, as though it weren't necessary.
|
|
"What's the plan for today?"
|
|
"Just some snooping around -- do you want to meet me at Magillicuddy's
|
|
after dinner or for dinner?"
|
|
"The food there sucks. But Stasia won't be out of work till seven; she
|
|
has to close the store. I suppose she'll be hungry, so we may as well eat there
|
|
as anywhere. Are you sure you're up to it?" Her eyes measured him in several
|
|
dimensions and she spoke like it was a challenge.
|
|
"I'm a big boy. You bringing Jones?"
|
|
"No, she's got better things to do tonight. Coven meeting, in fact.
|
|
Stasia's going with us, though."
|
|
"You're not in the coven?"
|
|
"It's not my scene."
|
|
Carey pushed up from the table, luxuriously stretched her arms over and
|
|
behind her head, deliciously popping several vertebrae into place. "I've got to
|
|
get to work, Mulder, I'm so late."
|
|
"Reading Tarot on a Saturday afternoon? For money? I had no idea you
|
|
were that kind of girl." Mulder shook out the front page of the paper.
|
|
She leaned over, velveting voice in his ear: "I'm exactly that kind of
|
|
girl."
|
|
Laughing out loud, Mulder waved a hand over his head at her as she
|
|
exited down the hall.
|
|
|
|
Dana browsed an African arts shop, a handmade jewelry store and
|
|
something that resembled a clothing store that contained nothing she would ever
|
|
be caught dead in. She was just leaving Zipperheads when a sign up one of the
|
|
cross streets caught her eye. Hand of Aries, witchcraft supplies.
|
|
The bell tinkled and a dog looked up at her as she entered. They passed
|
|
a few moments of polite conversation before the store owner appeared.
|
|
"Can I help you?" the middle-aged woman said pleasantly.
|
|
Dana glanced around the room at the kettles, drums, colored candles and
|
|
bins of herbs and said, "I have sort of a strange request."
|
|
The woman laughed. "I have sort of a strange store. Shoot."
|
|
"I'm looking for a friend of mine; I have no idea if you might know him
|
|
or have any idea who he is, but I know he was meeting someone in this area.
|
|
He's just over six feet tall, brown hair, his name is Fox Mulder."
|
|
The woman stared at the floor, thinking and sucking her teeth so long
|
|
that Dana was about to apologize and give up when the woman said, "Cute guy.
|
|
Young. Nice jawline."
|
|
"Yes, that could be him," Dana admitted, startled.
|
|
"I think I met him once at a talk in here. We had Z Budapest in and the
|
|
place was packed. He was with someone -- now who was he with? Stasia? No,
|
|
Carey. That's it, he was a friend of Carey's. She might know if he's in town.
|
|
Works at the Tarot joint on the main street -- 513. Just around the corner and
|
|
up the block."
|
|
"Thank you," Dana stammered, astonished. She considered Mulder's
|
|
theories way out there but his hypotheses were always grounded in fact, in
|
|
research. She would never have connected him with any occult or religious
|
|
groups. Witchcraft didn't seem to jibe with the Mulder she knew.
|
|
Well, at least she might be closer to finding him.
|
|
|
|
Mulder left the apartment, hands in his pockets, whistling. He was
|
|
relieved to discover no one had broken into his car during the night, drove it
|
|
to an all-day parking lot, forgot about it.
|
|
Phillip had given him directions to the University of Pennsylvania
|
|
library. Mulder strolled up 17th street and made his way to the campus.
|
|
The recent articles about the murder of John Carby all had roughly the
|
|
same story to tell. A young man, college dropout, living with an older male
|
|
lover. Nothing remarkable to report about either of them. Carby worked
|
|
occasionally; the older guy, a Russ Benston, was a clerk at a store downtown
|
|
and a junkie in his off-hours. Benston had shot the kid up with a lethal dose
|
|
one night. End of story.
|
|
One of the rustier local papers had run a full-page scandal story on
|
|
it, including alleged quotes from Benston saying that the devil had made him do
|
|
it.
|
|
Forehead resting on one hand while he read, Mulder snorted to himself.
|
|
"Yeah, right, fella."
|
|
The paper: " "There's a demon -- it's following me -- I just do what it
|
|
says, I don't ask questions any more, it's too horrible," said Benston and
|
|
broke down crying as the police dragged him up the steps to the station where
|
|
he will be held until his trial."
|
|
Mulder photocopied the cheeseball story, returned the papers to the
|
|
periodicals desk, wandered out of the library. He worked his way back towards
|
|
Stasia and Phillip's apartment. As he came down 18th, he could see the top of
|
|
Benston's building -- pointy and multi-leveled, with carved beasts on each of
|
|
the four corners.
|
|
"Spook central," Mulder grinned to himself and headed for it.
|
|
He wasn't looking for anything specific. He rode the elevator to the
|
|
top, then walked down, taking a turn around each floor as he went. Carey had
|
|
told him the apartment was 1220. He walked around the twelfth floor hallway,
|
|
staring at the carpet, thinking.
|
|
Stasia Ford was the manager of a comics store on South Street. Jones,
|
|
Carey's current girlfriend, was a red-haired woman working in commercial arts
|
|
downtown. Two floors above them in the building on Spruce Street lived a
|
|
professional banker with long blond hair and pink suits. Next door lived a
|
|
dog-groomer who kept her hair about half an inch long and wore jeans and
|
|
T-shirts to work; last year she had worked as a fish hauler in Alaska. An
|
|
independently wealthy heiress, a schoolteacher, a computer technician, a
|
|
history graduate student and a guitar player in a local band -- all these women
|
|
lived within a block of each other in the same downtown Philadelphia area. They
|
|
were not what the media would have recognized as a coven. As Jones once put it,
|
|
they didn't get much PR.
|
|
Nonetheless, a coven is what they were -- a group of people devoted to
|
|
exploring a spiritual path that might or might not have ancient roots, but
|
|
certainly had a long tradition in this particular urban area. Several similar
|
|
groups throughout the century had come and gone in Philadelphia. Mulder knew
|
|
that because Carey knew that. Carey knew that because she had a Ph.D. in
|
|
folklore, and the Philadelphia witch traditions had fascinated her for years.
|
|
She'd done a lot of fieldwork and had written a book on the lore of the area,
|
|
which had already gone out of print.
|
|
One of the persistent rumors of the area had to do with a demon that a
|
|
coven had called into existence in the mid-80's, then let get out of control.
|
|
It hadn't been the same sort of coven as the Spruce Street one that now
|
|
existed. It had been a group of college kids into scaring themselves with Ouija
|
|
boards and seances. Rumor said that one of them had become a born-again
|
|
Christian, one had left the country, one had killed herself and one still lived
|
|
in the building with the demon they couldn't manage. It was Benston's building.
|
|
John's building.
|
|
Mulder almost bumped into a woman leaving her apartment on the twelfth
|
|
floor. He glanced at her door. 1222.
|
|
"Excuse me, I was just going to knock," he said, smiling. "I'm looking
|
|
for John."
|
|
"John?" She looked puzzled, gripped her plastic bag of garbage a little
|
|
tighter. "I'm sorry, there's no one here by that --"
|
|
"John Carby. I'm sure this is his place. 1222, I thought he said."
|
|
Still a firmly friendly smile in place. "You need a hand with that?" he waved
|
|
at the trash.
|
|
A dawning understanding. "Oh my," she touched the back of his hand,
|
|
"I'm sorry, son. Was John Carby a friend of yours?"
|
|
"Ye -- uh, I -- I, don't know what you mean..." Mulder settled back on
|
|
his heels, worriedly searching her face.
|
|
"Oh dear. I'm sorry, dear. He lived next door to me. John's passed
|
|
away. Not long ago." She looked genuinely sorry. Somebody's grandmother, Mulder
|
|
thought to himself.
|
|
"What? How?"
|
|
Looking flustered, the woman waggled her fingers, distraught. "Perhaps
|
|
you should talk to the police, son -- rather nasty business -- terrible tragedy
|
|
-- really don't feel I can --"
|
|
"It was that Benston bastard he was with, wasn't it." Mulder shook his
|
|
head, trying to mix the proper amounts of anger and disbelief. "I never trusted
|
|
him."
|
|
"Oh now, you mustn't say that. I mean..." Recalling the facts of the
|
|
case, she looked like she would prefer to bolt into her apartment. But she
|
|
said, "I don't understand it myself. Who knows what makes people do the things
|
|
they do? I saw Mr. Benston every day myself and I would never have said he was
|
|
the sort of person to... Seemed so nice, I mean." Clearly at a loss as to what
|
|
else to say, she patted his hand reassuringly, then disappeared into her
|
|
apartment, closing the door safely between them, abandoning her garbage in the
|
|
hallway.
|
|
Hmm. But wasn't that what they always said. Mulder picked up the white
|
|
trash bag and took it to the elevator with him. Listening to the machines
|
|
sliding him smoothly down the shaft he wondered. Nice guy. Murders for no
|
|
reason.
|
|
What reason could there be, thought Mulder as he heaved the bag into
|
|
the dumpster.
|
|
|
|
Slow business day at the sign of the five fingers. Carey cut the deck
|
|
and stared at the passing feet; her shop window was below street level.
|
|
The bell tinkled.
|
|
Carey looked down; the two of swords. She looked up. A small woman with
|
|
a curve of red-gold hair, jeans and a T-shirt stood in the doorway, clearly
|
|
reluctant to enter further.
|
|
Swords. Air suit. Red hair. No connection. Hiding a frown, Carey said,
|
|
"Come on in. Get your cards read. No waiting."
|
|
"I'm not. I mean, I'm just looking for a friend."
|
|
Who isn't, Carey thought sourly to herself. "Yes?"
|
|
"I don't know if you know him; a woman down the street sent me this
|
|
way. His name's Mulder; he's tall, brown-haired--"
|
|
"--hazel-eyed, with great shoulders and a throat to die for. You must
|
|
be Scully."
|
|
The woman blinked. "Yes, Dana Scully. I'm sorry, I don't --"
|
|
"There's no reason you'd know who I am. I'm an old friend but a bad
|
|
one. I call him once a year, if that. Last time I spoke to him, which was over
|
|
breakfast this morning, he was quite full of praise about you. Delighted to
|
|
meet you so soon."
|
|
Carey liked to measure. Yep, there was a slight widening of the eyes
|
|
over the breakfast remark, but that was all. Dana stepped forward and offered a
|
|
slim hand. "Well then, delighted to meet you, Ms....?"
|
|
"Carey. Just call me Carey." Carey took the hand. It was warm and
|
|
smooth, the fingers tapered and light, the palm dry, nails short and tidy, no
|
|
rings. Carey grasped it with one of hers, smoothing a thumb across the back of
|
|
it as she released it, feeling it tremble slightly. God, this woman was tasty.
|
|
Characteristically, Mulder had left that out of his description.
|
|
"I think Mulder needs to see a doctor, make sure he's not dead," Carey
|
|
mumbled, shuffling half the card deck as she sat back down.
|
|
"Pardon?" Scully said brightly, leaning over the table.
|
|
"Nothing." Carey stared at the two of swords. From what she knew of
|
|
Scully, it made a lot more sense now.
|
|
"Well, you're looking for Mulder. I don't know where he'll be till this
|
|
evening. I could give you instructions to the place he's staying, but..?"
|
|
"Oh, that isn't necessary," Scully gave the answer the other woman was
|
|
clearly looking for, wishing she could just go straight there and wait.
|
|
Something about this woman made her nervous, and it wasn't the blue hair,
|
|
orange nails or pink skirt. It was something about the warmth of her hand and
|
|
the way she licked her lips.
|
|
"I tell you what, we can go to Reading Terminal Market for lunch, then
|
|
I can take you home. I mean, take you to where Mulder will be." Grinning, Carey
|
|
flipped the two of swords over flat on the table. Below it was the knight of
|
|
cups. Well, of course, she told herself. "I can go in about an hour -- I have
|
|
to wait till someone can fill in for me."
|
|
"That's fine, I've been having a great time just wandering around."
|
|
"Really? Have you been to Showcase Comics? Stasia Ford is the manager.
|
|
She's the one with the apartment where Mulder's staying."
|
|
"Oh. I thought he was with you."
|
|
Well, she had brought that out without a bobble; Carey gave her an A
|
|
for effort. "Stasia and her boyfriend Phillip have more rooms and more food.
|
|
I'm afraid I eat out or I don't eat. It's inconvenient for guests."
|
|
"Ah." Scully wondered if that was the beautiful woman she'd seen that
|
|
morning. She was beginning to wish she'd brought some better clothes with her.
|
|
Smiling at her own silliness, she stuffed her hands in her hip pockets and
|
|
leaned over the table again. "Well, I can wait. Can I get my cards read?"
|
|
"You don't believe." Carey slanted a sidewise look up at Dana.
|
|
Dana watched her shuffle the cards. "Neither do you."
|
|
Carey waved Dana into the chair opposite. "What makes you think that?"
|
|
"That... was a bona fide FBI hunch." Dana sat comfortably back in the
|
|
big chair across from the other woman.
|
|
"From a folkloric perspective, the images are fascinating." Carey
|
|
shuffled once more, cut the cards, then had Dana pick one and lay it face up on
|
|
the table.
|
|
A woman walking with a lion. Strength.
|
|
Carey shook her head and continued to deal. Some days it was harder to
|
|
not believe than others.
|
|
|
|
Mulder stopped quickly, before a stocky Asian man with a crate of jars
|
|
could barrel into him. The guy crossed his path and went on without another
|
|
look. Someone behind him bumped into him, and he could feel ice cream brushing
|
|
the back of one arm, wet and cold. He rubbed it against his T-shirt as a woman
|
|
passing him by banged him in the shin with a large square paper bag of what
|
|
felt like bricks.
|
|
Mulder loved Reading Terminal Market.
|
|
He dutifully stood in line for a soft pretzel and carried it with him,
|
|
munching, while he surveyed the food stalls. What did he feel like? Chinese?
|
|
Amish? Something in between? Phillip's waffles were still on his mind and he
|
|
wasn't that hungry. He acquired a bagel with lox and a bottle of Snapple and
|
|
went to sit at a table.
|
|
He watched a little Italian woman bargaining over some raw fish and
|
|
picked at his bagel.
|
|
He couldn't remember John Carby and that bothered him. Carey assured
|
|
him he'd met the man at least once, well over two years ago. He had a
|
|
photographic memory; why couldn't he remember John's face? Not like it was in
|
|
the photos in the papers, a high-school photographer's shot, but as it was when
|
|
he met him, alive, smiling, shaking hands, talking?
|
|
Walking through the market with a pretzel and a bottle of tea?
|
|
He thought of Carey when he'd first met her. She'd worn her hair up in
|
|
a knot; she'd worn dark slacks and blazers; she'd looked forty. She'd been
|
|
presenting a paper on the regional differences between Bigfoot myths at a
|
|
national conference on urban folklore; he'd asked a question from the audience.
|
|
"But are they true?" he'd asked.
|
|
A gentle wave of laughter prevented the necessity of her answering;
|
|
she'd smiled and the panel's moderator recognized another hand.
|
|
But afterwards she'd cornered him in the bar of the hotel hosting the
|
|
conference. She told him she wanted to get funding to trace the way some pieces
|
|
of folklore seemed to spontaneously rekindle themselves; she wanted to
|
|
investigate what ways there might have been of communicating those myths. Why
|
|
did they recur?
|
|
A tense little woman with a tight blond haircut had retrieved her from
|
|
the bar and taken her off somewhere.
|
|
A year later he saw her at another conference. She looked tired and
|
|
suspicious. When he asked her how her work was going, she showed him her new
|
|
tattoo, a green vine winding around one ankle.
|
|
Six months later he saw an article by her in Reader's Digest. Four
|
|
months after that he saw her in Philadelphia, in a restaurant. Her hair was
|
|
down, the gray streak in it was dyed fire-engine red; she wore an India print
|
|
skirt and she was laughing. She looked ten years younger. This time she was
|
|
with a tall black curvaceous woman who moved and looked like a dancer. She
|
|
invited him to join their group and later on invited him to her place for a
|
|
drink. She'd given him a truly fantastic backrub and a very sweet offer which
|
|
he politely declined.
|
|
Over the years he had consulted her a few times when he wanted some
|
|
background information. She read and spoke fluent Spanish and German, spoke two
|
|
languages from sub-Saharan Africa and had a beginner's knowledge of Cantonese;
|
|
and she had almost encyclopedic knowledge of regional American folklore, its
|
|
international origins and its time-linked variations. She no longer published
|
|
in academic circles, and she did odd jobs, including Tarot reading, for a
|
|
living. She seemed much happier. Mulder never asked her what she hadn't liked
|
|
about her former career.
|
|
He thought maybe he knew.
|
|
Sometimes when he saw her she repeated her very sweet offer from the
|
|
night of the backrub; he politely ignored it. He knew she thought he was
|
|
attractive, and he found that flattering, especially since it seemed that men
|
|
were not, generally speaking, her type. Sometimes he supposed he thought her
|
|
attractive as well, but there was always a good reason to turn her down, and he
|
|
felt more comfortable that way.
|
|
Mulder flicked a bit of bagel at a trash can; it went in.
|
|
What else could he do about the Carby case? He couldn't go to the
|
|
police and request the case file; and in any case, there was no question about
|
|
the identity of the murder. Carey wanted him to see what he could find out
|
|
about the motive. Specifically, about the demon.
|
|
He was a psychologist; he had his own theories about the demon. Carey
|
|
was a folklorist; she had her own theories about the demon. None of them
|
|
necessarily involved its actual existence.
|
|
But, disturbingly, a boy was dead, and there seemed no reason for it.
|
|
Mulder spent his days compiling profiles of killers. In their own mind,
|
|
they had reasons for what they did. The patterns were complex and startling in
|
|
their horrible swashbuckling originality. He needed to find out Benston's
|
|
pattern.
|
|
Drawing triangles over and over on the tabletop, Mulder thought.
|
|
|
|
"How'd you like the market?" Carey asked Dana as they crossed with the
|
|
light at the corner of South and Eighth streets.
|
|
"It's wonderful! If I lived within walking distance of a place like
|
|
that I'd never need another restaurant. Whatever you wouldn't want to eat
|
|
there, you could take home and cook. Just thinking about it makes me hungry,"
|
|
she laughed, rubbing her stomach, "and I'm stuffed!"
|
|
"Next time you promise you'll try one of the pickled eggs," Carey
|
|
teased. She was used to the horrified looks her friends gave to the magenta
|
|
eggs, pickled in beet juice the Amish way.
|
|
"Hey, I would have tried one this time, if I hadn't already been
|
|
stuffed to the gills," Dana casually remarked, looking in one window at a water
|
|
fountain tinkling in the middle of a bookstore. "I suppose you have to be back
|
|
at the shop."
|
|
"I'm taking a long lunch break. I work short hours on Saturday anyway.
|
|
Is there anything else you'd like to see?"
|
|
"Oh, there's lots of South Street I haven't seen yet!"
|
|
Carey looked at her. The sun shone like a liquid gold wave on the curve
|
|
of her hair. Her pale eyes sparkled with interest and she looked very young to
|
|
be an FBI agent. "You're having a good time," Carey remarked with satisfaction.
|
|
"I am," Dana confirmed, half-surprised herself. "Well, I had no reason
|
|
to come up here, so I'm enjoying being sort of goal-less for a day. It's quite
|
|
a luxury. I hope Mulder is doing the same thing."
|
|
Carey looked down at her feet in Berkenstock sandals, then back at
|
|
Dana. "Well, I'm glad you can amuse yourself till it's time to take you home.
|
|
If you get tired of walking around you can always pop in at Stasia's; there's a
|
|
huge furnished basement to the store, and you can be pretty comfortable down
|
|
there, if you don't mind being surrounded by boxes of comics."
|
|
"I'm sure I'll be fine." Scully flashed the taller woman a smile, then
|
|
surveyed several windows as they passed them. When the silence had stretched a
|
|
bit thinner than was comfortable, she said, "Won't you tell me about the case
|
|
Mulder's working on?"
|
|
The sound of shoes hitting the pavement, theirs, others, pattered
|
|
around them for a minute or two. Then Carey reported dispassionately the facts
|
|
of her friend's murder. Twenty-three. Smart. Healthy. Romantically
|
|
head-over-heels. Trusting, honest. Found at six forty-six on a Friday evening,
|
|
time of death placed definitely at around thirty-six hours before, no sign of
|
|
a struggle. Buried two days later. Mother and brother attended from out of
|
|
state.
|
|
Scully listened carefully to the words metronomed by the sound of their
|
|
own feet. She pondered; she sympathized; she remained quiet.
|
|
Only at one point did a tear escape its confines and slide down Carey's
|
|
face, unfettered and apparently remorseless. Carey swept it away before it
|
|
could make a statement of its own.
|
|
"I'm glad Mulder's helping you out," Scully used her best FBI sympathy
|
|
voice, "but it looks to me as though the case is pretty cut and dried."
|
|
"It is." Short, heavy, plop, no more discussion.
|
|
Step step.
|
|
"Well, here's the door. You can meet me back here if you like." Carey
|
|
put one foot on the first descending stair.
|
|
"I think I'd rather come with you for a while. Looks pretty slow still.
|
|
I could keep you company for a while; if it gets busy, there's lots of South
|
|
Street left to see. I think my feet could use a rest." Scully gave Carey a
|
|
reassuring smile and brushed past her down the steps.
|
|
Carey watched her red-gold head disappear into the shadows. She looked
|
|
up the street. The sun had a long way to go before making his exit; but it was
|
|
getting later and people were starting to move out and about. Slowly she walked
|
|
down the cool cement stairs.
|
|
A flicker of an idea had ignited in her belly when Dana Scully had
|
|
brushed past her; it warmed and interested her. She followed.
|
|
|
|
It was a slow late afternoon. Carey and Dana talked about their
|
|
families, their likes and dislikes in food, especially ice cream flavors, and
|
|
films, and about a lecturer in linguistics each had seen at their respective
|
|
undergraduate colleges. It didn't surprise Carey to learn that Dana loved
|
|
opera; it didn't surprise Dana to learn that Carey collected vintage Warner
|
|
Brother cartoons.
|
|
"Bugs Bunny," Carey chuckled, shaking her head and shuffling her cards
|
|
-- her hands preferred to do something -- "*there's* your American cultural
|
|
icon. You wouldn't believe the number of bad books that are written about --
|
|
well, I suppose you would, but there's a great book still waiting in that
|
|
subject. If I get in the mood to write a scholarly work again that's what I'm
|
|
going for. Another Coke?"
|
|
"No thanks." Scully uncapped a mineral water. She already felt wired.
|
|
She didn't need any more caffeine or sugar.
|
|
"By the time we get to Magillicuddy's you will have walked off that
|
|
lunch and all the sugar, believe me." Carey leaned back in her chair, thumb
|
|
riffling her cards. She looked sleepy and warm. The air-conditioning was set at
|
|
a reasonable temperature; a fan shifted the cooler air around; the breeze kept
|
|
Carey's hair moving, constantly, in defiance of gravity; it looked weightless.
|
|
Scully considered for a moment reaching out and touching it, then
|
|
looked out the window and forgot the impulse. "It's clouding over. Is it far to
|
|
walk home?"
|
|
"It's a decent walk, and I think I heard it was supposed to storm
|
|
tonight, but that won't break for ages. You like thunderstorms?"
|
|
"Actually, not much." The look was rueful. "You?"
|
|
Carey grinned, pushed her hair back from her face and looked out and
|
|
up. "Love them."
|
|
|
|
Mulder rang the bell to Stasia and Phillip's apartment. Even on the
|
|
first floor and outside two doors he could hear Phillip bounding down the
|
|
hallway to buzz him in.
|
|
"Hey," Mulder greeted him as he came up the stairs. "I thought I'd
|
|
check out a couple of other places before I go to Magillicuddy's."
|
|
Phillip nodded and shooed his cats back inside as they entered the
|
|
apartment. He rattled off the names of some of the places John used to go. "I
|
|
think Benston was usually with him -- certainly these last few months he was."
|
|
"It's a little early, but I wanted to change. Got any advice on what I
|
|
should wear?"
|
|
Phillip looked down at his own t-shirt and sweatpants. It was what he
|
|
wore 365 days a year. He looked up at Mulder. "No. But I know who can help."
|
|
|
|
From the moment the door closed behind him, Carter Davis filled the
|
|
apartment with noise and imaginary taffeta. "Oo, what I wouldn't give to dress
|
|
you, honey," he purred at Mulder and blinked up through his eyelashes at him.
|
|
"Where are you going?"
|
|
Mulder mentioned a few names.
|
|
Carter surveyed Mulder's jeans closely. Finally he pronounced, "I'll
|
|
say this, honey. You can go retro, or you can go grunge. You can't wear
|
|
_that_." He pointed at the gray shirt Mulder was wearing as though it were
|
|
poison ivy and might leap out and strangle him.
|
|
"Grunge? I can do grunge," Mulder insisted and pulled out a Knicks
|
|
jersey and a blue flannel shirt.
|
|
"Flannel? In July? What are you thinking?" Carter forgot to flirt in
|
|
his fashion horror.
|
|
Mulder felt like his Cinderella license was about to expire. "I'm
|
|
sorry, I don't have anything else."
|
|
Carter snapped his fingers. "I know who can help."
|
|
|
|
The young man who sloped in wore tan bellbottoms, a green t-shirt and
|
|
had a mane of bushy hair tamed into a ponytail; he was well over six feet and
|
|
he slouched. He bore an uncanny resemblance to Shaggy from _Scooby Doo._ He
|
|
noticed Mulder noticing this and said immediately, "Everyone has a goal. This
|
|
is mine."
|
|
His name was Barry and he walked around Mulder as though he were an
|
|
open grave. He shook his head gravely.
|
|
"Sorry guys, the buzz cut is hardly retro -- and even if I loaned him
|
|
something, he'd split my pants in a minute."
|
|
Carter mumbled something about paying to see that. Phillip rebutted by
|
|
picking up a huge tabby-striped cat and buffing Carter's face with him. The cat
|
|
didn't seem to mind.
|
|
"Oh right," Carter spluttered, "like you didn't know I was going to say
|
|
that."
|
|
Mulder felt the situation was spinning out of control. "Guys." They all
|
|
looked at him. "I have to wear something."
|
|
Carter picked up the jersey gingerly. "How fond are you of this?"
|
|
|
|
Carey's apartment was a two-room several floors above Stasia and
|
|
Phillip's. She and Dana had reached it just before the sky had begun to show
|
|
signs of darkening from the sun going down rather than from gathering clouds.
|
|
Sunset was still a ways away down the long summer evening.
|
|
Carey rattled around in the tiny attached "convenience" kitchen while
|
|
Dana orbited the living room. Dana took a quick survey of the CD rack, of
|
|
several tall narrow bookcases stuffed full. The overwhelming preponderance of
|
|
artists in both cases were women.
|
|
Interesting.
|
|
When she returned Carey offered Dana a tall frosty glass. Dana took it
|
|
and sipped; delighted, she exclaimed, "Orange juice!"
|
|
"Nothing better in the summer," Carey sighed and slipped her shoes off,
|
|
wriggling happy toes in the thick Oriental carpet. "There's gin in mine. Didn't
|
|
know if you wanted any."
|
|
"Maybe later. Didn't you say this was a bar we're going to?"
|
|
Carey plopped down on the loveseat, leaned her head on her fist,
|
|
propping her elbow on the arm of the couch: "Are you sure you want to go? It's
|
|
not a very... nice... place."
|
|
Dana seated herself in a chair, crossed her legs and looked levelly at
|
|
her hostess. "Meaning you think of me as a very...*nice*... girl. Well, get
|
|
over it. I don't let Daddy screen my dates any more." She punctuated this with
|
|
a very slight smile.
|
|
"Really? Do you kiss on the first date?" But she didn't give Dana a
|
|
chance to answer. "So, what are you going to wear?" she continued abruptly.
|
|
"Erm,... this?"
|
|
"Think again. This is a very... *equal opportunity* club we're going
|
|
to, but you want something spiffier than that." "Look, just tell me what kind
|
|
of club it is."
|
|
Carey sipped the juice, delicately licked a drop as it escaped down the
|
|
side of the frosty glass. "It's a bondage club."
|
|
"Okay, well, that makes it a lot simpler. I have nothing to wear to a
|
|
bondage club."
|
|
Admiringly Carey watched the tiny smile lurk its way from one corner of
|
|
the impossibly luscious mouth to the other. Before she became mesmerized she
|
|
interrupted herself. "Anything sexy will do."
|
|
"Hmm." Scully went out to the hall, returned with her bag. "Here's the
|
|
materials. You decide."
|
|
Carey snapped open the well-worn weekend bag, flipped through the
|
|
contents, pronounced within minutes, "Nope, nope, and nope. Look, I'll just run
|
|
downstairs and borrow something for you. I think you and Stasia are about the
|
|
same size."
|
|
Despite misgivings Scully didn't object, and Carey came back quite soon
|
|
with an outfit bundled into one hand. "Try on these." Scully knew she would
|
|
betray her Catholic upbringing if she burst out with "These *what*?" so instead
|
|
she took the tiny items and shook them out. It was a small black skirt, mostly
|
|
spandex, and a sleeveless cotton jersey highnecked gold top.
|
|
"I'll be right back."
|
|
Carey put on the latest Melissa Etheridge album while she waited. She
|
|
knew simply from how long it was taking that something was wrong.
|
|
"Carey, I can't wear this," Scully's voice drifted up the hall.
|
|
"Come on, let's see it," Carey insisted, tossing a mass of dark hair
|
|
back over her shoulder and peering down the hall.
|
|
Beat, beat, ba beat. The sound of Scully's bare feet on the board floor
|
|
was swallowed up in the beat of the guitar.
|
|
"Well." Carey put her glass down, slowly and deliberately, and stood up
|
|
to walk around Dana.
|
|
*Please baby can't you see
|
|
my mind's a burnin' hell
|
|
I got razors a rippin' and
|
|
tearin' and strippin'
|
|
my heart apart as well.*
|
|
The soft gold jersey clung to Dana's figure like a second skin,
|
|
outlining each soft breast and sleeking down to a waist that seemed so small,
|
|
Carey could span it with her hands. The skirt was only punctuation for a pair
|
|
of perfectly sculpted legs. The sleeveless top left her arms, pearl pink,
|
|
looking bare, very bare, invitingly bare.
|
|
Carey cleared her throat.
|
|
*Tonight you told me
|
|
That you ache for something new
|
|
And some other woman is lookin' like something
|
|
That might be good for you.*
|
|
Very carefully Carey circled Dana again. She swept the redgold curve of
|
|
shining hair up in one hand, with the other tucked the tag down the neck of the
|
|
top. The skin of Dana's neck was warm against her fingers and her hair slid,
|
|
silk strands, across the back of her hand.
|
|
Guitar climax.
|
|
*But I'm the only one
|
|
Who'll walk across the fire for you
|
|
And I'm the only one
|
|
Who'll drown in my desire for you;
|
|
It's only fear that makes you run..."
|
|
Carey had to clear her throat again. "Well, _I_ like it." Only a slight
|
|
rasp in the voice. "It'll certainly help you look like you intended to go to
|
|
Magillicuddy's and aren't just there looking for a pay phone."
|
|
"It's not what I generally wear out on a Saturday night," Scully
|
|
chuckled wryly, twisting to try and see the back of the skirt.
|
|
"Hey. Dana. You look great. Really." Carey handed her back her orange
|
|
juice. "Absolutely great."
|
|
Dana looked up. The other woman's eyes, dark hazel, sparkled with a
|
|
kind of admiration Dana Scully just didn't see enough of in anyone's eyes. She
|
|
smiled. "Thanks."
|
|
She tiptoed off down the hallway to peruse the mirror again briefly,
|
|
saying out loud, "I wonder what Mulder's wearing."
|
|
|
|
It was Mulder's fourth bar. He'd stopped noticing the second-hand smoke
|
|
two bars back. He also hadn't ordered anything stronger than beer, or he'd be
|
|
flat out on the floor by now. As it was, he was beginning to feel that the top
|
|
of his head were beginning to float but that blinders were starting to close
|
|
around his vision. He grabbed a handful of pretzels; he needed some starch.
|
|
Where the hell was Carey?
|
|
The guy next to him was his dozenth interview of the evening. Mulder
|
|
had built up a pretty solid picture of Benston. A harmless-seeming individual,
|
|
addicted and therefore generally too purposeless to accomplish much, only four
|
|
people had reported ever seeing evidence of what they called a "mean streak" in
|
|
the guy. He had been desperately attached to the younger man.
|
|
This guy Mulder was talking to now, six foot eight if he was an inch
|
|
and a good two hundred and seventy-five pounds, far too much of it muscle, deep
|
|
black skin gleaming with a light coating of sweat -- or oil; Mulder didn't want
|
|
to underemphasize his showmanship -- this guy had stopped telling him about
|
|
Carby and Benston and started telling him about his silk scarf collection.
|
|
Mulder's mind was definitely drifting when he heard the familiar voice at his
|
|
elbow.
|
|
"FOX!"
|
|
Closing his eyes, his head dropped back on his neck, and rolled to face
|
|
her. In that moment he'd sent up his prayer and now it was in the laps of the
|
|
gods, he supposed.
|
|
Dana immediately regretted her outburst. The look in Mulder's eyes was
|
|
all too clear, even in the murky bar. "Please, Dana, don't get me killed in
|
|
here," he was saying to her.
|
|
Possibly too late. "Fox?" The black man at Mulder's elbow peered at
|
|
him, a grin starting. "That your name or something?"
|
|
"No," Dana thought quick and slid up next to Mulder at the bar, hooking
|
|
one finger in a beltloop of his jeans and pulling him close to her. "That's
|
|
just what I call him. You never called," she growled at Mulder.
|
|
Fascinated, he stared down at her.
|
|
"Mmph. I don't think you're his type, lady," the other guy said, not
|
|
entirely willing to give up his choice prize immediately.
|
|
"Oh, I think I *am*," she said, managing to be both territorial and
|
|
sympathetically dismissive at the same time. Mulder was still staring at her,
|
|
dazed, and the other guy was examining her closely. Inspired, she slipped one
|
|
foot between his and let the toe of her black pump slide up and down Mulder's
|
|
denim-clad calf. She leaned up and whispered something in his ear.
|
|
Disgruntled, the other man muttered, "Catch you later, man," and took
|
|
his drink with him when he left.
|
|
That seemed to galvanize Mulder somewhat. "Dana, what the hell are you
|
|
doing?"
|
|
"Shall I tell him you've changed your mind, you're free this evening?"
|
|
She grinned wickedly up at him. "I really didn't think he was your type."
|
|
Slowly he looked up and down the length of her. "Now why haven't you
|
|
ever worn that to the J. Edgar Hoover building?"
|
|
"You like it? Maybe _you_ should wear it to the J. Edgar Hoover
|
|
building. What the hell _are_ you wearing, anyway?"
|
|
It was only his Knicks jersey, but someone had taken a mean pair of
|
|
scissors to it. It now sported a huge scoop neckline and arm openings that
|
|
started at his shoulder and left most of his sides bare, displaying both pects
|
|
and abs to great advantage, not to mention arm muscles. Someone had loaned him
|
|
a pair of jeans that were tight and worn almost threadbare; strategic holes had
|
|
formed in various locations. His throat was bare but he wore three gold hoops
|
|
in his right ear.
|
|
She was staring. He leaned down and spoke softly into her ear. "They're
|
|
clip-ons."
|
|
"I think they'd go pretty well with this outfit. You sure you don't
|
|
want to try it on?"
|
|
"Dana, I had no idea you were in town. How on earth did you get here?"
|
|
"Mario, gimme a gin and tonic," caroled a velvety alto right behind
|
|
him, then Carey had snuggled up to the bar right next to Dana. "What can I get
|
|
you?"
|
|
"Carey, you didn't bring her here."
|
|
"Nope, I didn't. Little grey men from Reticula did. How much have you
|
|
had, Mulder?"
|
|
A little too much, he realized; no more for him. "You're not buying her
|
|
a drink."
|
|
"Why? Were you going to buy her one? Well, too slow."
|
|
"Just a white wine for now, Carey. Maybe something stronger later."
|
|
"Never mix your drinks," the woman shook her head solemnly, and waved
|
|
the bartender over, ordered the wine.
|
|
Mulder definitely felt a little foggy, and it was taking him longer
|
|
than it should have to get his bearings. "Where's... Stasia? or Phillip? Did
|
|
Jones come?"
|
|
"She couldn't come. They're over there. Look, I think they snagged us a
|
|
table." Carey deftly scooped up both drinks when they came and, hand placed
|
|
lightly behind Dana's arm, steered her over to the table. Mulder tagged along
|
|
behind. A couple of other people had already wandered over to greet Stasia and
|
|
Phillip. They all squeezed around a table, Mulder managing to snatch a chair
|
|
near his partner.
|
|
"So Dana," he said, when they were all seated and a round of greetings
|
|
had been performed, "tell me about your day."
|
|
|
|
It wasn't Dana's usual Saturday night out, but, she told herself later
|
|
on, she didn't usually go out on Saturday nights any more.
|
|
She and Mulder sat close to one another so they could hear one another
|
|
over the music; the others had disappeared into the bar haze.
|
|
"So they thought there was some sort of demon involved in the murder
|
|
case? And Carey asked you to investigate?" Dana had been brought up to speed on
|
|
what he knew of the case so far.
|
|
"Hey, who you gonna call?" Mulder smiled and shrugged.
|
|
"And what do you think so far?"
|
|
"Honestly? That Benston was a mean son of a bitch who went too far one
|
|
night. He was very possessive of Carby and one night he pushed the privacy line
|
|
way too far. Like countless other murders, Scully. These guys have no bravado,
|
|
no style in their killing; they're scared little people who commit scared
|
|
little murders. But that's what makes it so puzzling. They're *all* puzzling.
|
|
I'm not surprised these demon rumors are making the rounds so fast. Isn't that
|
|
what we'd all like? A little explanation for the pointless violence?" He lifted
|
|
the glass of ice water to his lips.
|
|
He'd sobered up pretty fast, she observed. "Still, murder is not an
|
|
everyday act. It's not like leaving the lights on or forgetting to lock the
|
|
door; something has to push you to an action that drastic, Mulder."
|
|
"Are you saying the devil made him do it, Scully?" Disbelieving grin.
|
|
"Of course not. I'm saying that people don't, as a rule, commit murder.
|
|
Would it be possible to find out if any investigation's been done into
|
|
Benston's physical and psychological state? There are several organic causes
|
|
for psychoses that can cause violent behavior; if he has no history of mental
|
|
illness, it's still possible that there will be evidence turning up of that
|
|
sort. *Has* he a history of mental illness?"
|
|
Mulder looked at her. The dim lights gleamed off her hair and skin; he
|
|
noticed, for the first time that evening, that she looked beautiful. And she
|
|
was discussing organic causes for pathological violent behavior. This is what
|
|
the job does to us, he mused, twisting his sweating glass in the ring it made
|
|
on the tabletop. "No," he mumbled, "no history of mental illness."
|
|
"What's the matter, Mulder?" But at that moment, Carey appeared again
|
|
out of the smoky fog.
|
|
She put a hand on Mulder's shoulder, and he looked up at her. Her dark
|
|
hair, blue streaked, slid forward over her shoulder; automatically she pushed
|
|
it back. A sleeveless cobalt silk shirt, unbuttoned to the point of cleavage
|
|
and just beyond, draped lightly over a pair of baggy-cut black silk pants, full
|
|
enough to almost hide the sandals she wore. The neon orange of long, perfect
|
|
nails actually coordinated brilliantly with the cobalt blue of the silk, the
|
|
same color as the streak in her hair. She wore no makeup and it struck Mulder
|
|
that no one had such perfectly shaped, not quite too-full, rose-pink lips
|
|
naturally. It was absurd.
|
|
Dana, observing both of them, realized for the first time that the
|
|
hazel of their eyes was nearly the exact same shade.
|
|
Carey looked at Scully and smiled. "Want to dance?"
|
|
Scully's eyes widened a little. The Catholic girl in her scampered away
|
|
into a cold dark corner, overwhelmed with the weirdness of the night. She was
|
|
having fun so far; she could dance or she could theorize about murders with
|
|
Mulder. It was what Mulder himself would have called a "no-brainer." Scully
|
|
smiled back and rose from her seat. "Why not?"
|
|
Carey backed up, let Scully wend her way through the scattering of
|
|
chairs and past the table where Mulder still sat to the dance floor. Over her
|
|
head Carey caught Mulder's eye. Carey liked to measure. The expression in
|
|
Mulder's eyes was undefinable but large.
|
|
They left him sitting there.
|
|
He let his head fall against the padded back of the chair, sliding down
|
|
till the base of his spine rested on the seat of the chair, stretching his long
|
|
legs out in front of him luxuriously.
|
|
Dana hadn't danced in ages. Fast dancing in this crowd was no problem;
|
|
it was like dancing with a group of friends anywhere. She could feel the beat
|
|
in her belly, in her lungs, in her eyeballs; it pressed on her from everywhere.
|
|
She danced to it.
|
|
When the faster music segued into something slower she came back to
|
|
herself. Carey had lifted the mass of her hair off her neck and was fanning her
|
|
face, laughing. Stasia, dark eyes gleaming, shyly wrapped her arms around the
|
|
ever-bemused Phillip's neck and laughed at him as he attempted to slow dance.
|
|
Carey was looking at her.
|
|
Dana was frightened. She wasn't frightened of Carey, she was frightened
|
|
of doing or saying the wrong thing. She also wasn't a particularly great slow
|
|
dancer; it had been a long time, and she didn't think Carey knew the box step
|
|
that Dana had learned years ago in school. Dana Scully was an extremely orderly
|
|
person. She never ran out of milk and she actually wrote dates down in her
|
|
planner. When she bought toys for her nephew she bought the batteries to go
|
|
with them. She was having a very odd weekend, and she knew that she was going
|
|
to dance with this woman, which would make it even odder. She wondered if
|
|
perhaps aliens had taken over her mind somewhere on route 95 and switched her
|
|
brain with someone else's.
|
|
Carey smiled and held out a hand.
|
|
Impelled by curiosity, generosity and the exuberance of the dancing
|
|
she'd just done, Dana took her hand, smiling roguishly, and moved closer.
|
|
Carey carefully placed one hand in the small of her back and never
|
|
moved it.
|
|
Yes, she did know the box step.
|
|
At his table, Mulder squinted, apparently from the smoke, and ordered
|
|
another drink.
|
|
|
|
The trip back downtown was only a short train ride and a walk. The walk
|
|
wore the booze out of everyone. The group of people heading for the same
|
|
apartment building near the square spread out, reformed, gained and lost
|
|
members as it moved along, but managed to reach the building in a relatively
|
|
cohesive whole; at that point, however, it fragmented, with many of its
|
|
constituents trailing off to their own apartments. The core group made it back
|
|
to Phillip and Stasia's apartment.
|
|
Carter put on some Nine Inch Nails and they lounged around the living
|
|
room, exhausted. Stasia leaned on Phillip's knee; Barry and a woman they'd
|
|
connected with at the bar, apparently known to all of them and named Liz,
|
|
argued amiably about something in a corner; Scully plopped herself down on the
|
|
couch, kicked her shoes off and wiggled her toes, and Carey threw herself full
|
|
length on the floor, sighing as she pulled a couch cushion under her head to
|
|
support it.
|
|
Mulder mumbled something and stumbled down the dark hall to the
|
|
bathroom.
|
|
"That was fun," Scully sighed.
|
|
"Yeah, it was," Phillip agreed. "We should do that more often."
|
|
"We _do_," Stasia poked him in the side, "it's just that you don't go
|
|
with us, Mr. Betty Crocker Stay-at-home."
|
|
The big man rubbed his brushcut hair ruefully with one hand, and
|
|
shrugged. "Well, it *was* fun."
|
|
"My feet are dying," Carey announced to the room at large.
|
|
"Mine too," Scully agreed.
|
|
"Here," and Carey reached up from her supine position to rub one of
|
|
Scully's stocking-clad feet.
|
|
"Mmm." Scully's head dropped back against the back of the couch and her
|
|
eyes closed. "You could do that forever."
|
|
Carey grinned. "Getting old, Dana?"
|
|
"Getting old_er_. It's happening to all of us."
|
|
"Speak for yourself. Here, sit down here."
|
|
Will weakened by the footrubbing, Scully slid off the couch and onto
|
|
the floor to sit, knees together, with her legs turned to one side.
|
|
Carey got up on the couch and started to rub Dana's neck.
|
|
"Oh my God," Dana murmured and let her head fall forward.
|
|
Chuckling, Carey worked her way down the tendons on either side of the
|
|
neck to the shoulders.
|
|
Dana could have fallen asleep right there. Carey's large hands were
|
|
warm and soft, her fingers strong as she stroked the muscles and tendons into
|
|
warm melting puddles of wax. She dug into the muscles at the edges of the
|
|
shoulderblades and Dana made a small involuntary sound of pleasure.
|
|
Carey couldn't resist; she only had to bend forward just so slightly to
|
|
brush her lips against the skin at the back of the silky neck in front of her.
|
|
A shiver ran up Dana's spine and she straightened slowly; she didn't open her
|
|
eyes, but Carey could feel that she was more awake and wary now. Carey
|
|
murmured, "If you like this you should try my full-fledged
|
|
massage-until-you're-weak-with-delight special. It usually costs the earth, but
|
|
for you --"
|
|
Everyone in the room jumped as the door to the hallway banged shut.
|
|
Mulder stood there, a cup of coffee in his hands, looking very pointedly at
|
|
Carey and at no one else.
|
|
"I think this one's going to put me under the table," Dana mumbled,
|
|
then looked up at Mulder too.
|
|
Sleepy and alcohol-fogged, she couldn't figure out why he was looking
|
|
so odd.
|
|
"Maybe you need some fresh air," and crossing the room in two steps he
|
|
offered her a hand.
|
|
Bewildered, not really knowing what he was doing, she took it, and was
|
|
as surprised as anyone else when he hauled her to her feet.
|
|
"If you haven't seen this balcony yet, you're gonna love it," Mulder
|
|
said grimly and showed her the door out the back of the apartment.
|
|
|
|
The stars were blotted out along the horizon by the orange-yellow glow
|
|
of the city itself. Along dark rooftops porchlights sparkled; streetlights
|
|
illuminated the eaves of buildings and outlined their shape against other
|
|
buildings; windows, bare flat white light or dark pastel shades, stood out here
|
|
and there in the black. The balcony looked out over a small yard; an oak tree
|
|
in the yard reached nearly up to where Mulder and Scully stood; a bronze
|
|
giraffe failed entirely to reach that high.
|
|
They looked out over the buildings, Legos for giants with architectural
|
|
add-ons, and Mulder leaned against the railing.
|
|
"You know, Mulder," Scully said, tucking her stockinged feet under her
|
|
on a wooden bench and leaning against the rail, "somehow it doesn't surprise me
|
|
that you came up here for a fun weekend and yet I'm the only one having any
|
|
fun."
|
|
"That's not true, Scully. I mean, I knew I was going to work, and I've
|
|
had some fun too."
|
|
"Clearly not enough."
|
|
Her tone was so slicing that he looked at her. Her pale gray eyes
|
|
looked sleepy and a little red-rimmed from the smoke in the bars, but they were
|
|
focused firmly on him.
|
|
"No, clearly not enough. What did you think of that last guy who tried
|
|
to pick me up? I don't know about those guys in suits, those are always the
|
|
ones who like handcuffs and other nasty things, but his suit sure was
|
|
expensive. Maybe I could have hit him up for a new Porsche or something before
|
|
he got tired of me." Batting his eyelashes outrageously, he pulled a deck chair
|
|
up to where she sat and rested his feet on the bench.
|
|
She actually giggled before she could repress herself. "I thought that
|
|
woman in the stiletto heels was more your type."
|
|
"Ouch." Grasping his chest, "You got me."
|
|
"I saw you eyeing her." Scully took a deep breath, enjoying the night
|
|
air, cool after the hot summer day. "You could have at least danced with her,
|
|
Mulder. It wouldn't have killed you."
|
|
"Dance?"
|
|
"Yes, dance. You've heard of it."
|
|
"Oh yeah, I think I have."
|
|
She sighed. "There is more to life than thinking, Mulder."
|
|
His jaw dropped dramatically. "Dr. Scully? Do you feel faint?"
|
|
"Not about cases, Mulder. Never about that. But don't you ever feel
|
|
like there's more to life than the FBI? More than murder and unexplained
|
|
phenomena and power games you don't want to play?"
|
|
"Actually, no." He rubbed his chin with one hand; he could feel the
|
|
slight stubble. "I don't spend a lot of time wondering about that."
|
|
"Not wondering, Mulder. The last thing you need is more thoughts
|
|
roaming around in your head, unattached and taking your attention. Just
|
|
feeling. Feeling like maybe dancing is a good thing."
|
|
She leaned her head against her arm and closed her eyes. Quiet reigned
|
|
for so long that at last Mulder leaned forward.
|
|
"Scully?" he whispered. "Ready for bed?"
|
|
"Mmhmm," she murmured, not opening her eyes.
|
|
She only blinked a little as he put one hand under her arm, steered her
|
|
into the apartment. The lights were mostly off now; only Barry, snoring in a
|
|
corner chair, remained, and he woke up as they came in.
|
|
"Oh man, I gotta go home," he moaned. "Come lock the door after me."
|
|
Mulder deposited Dana on the couch, where she promptly fell comfortably
|
|
over. "I'll get you a blanket while I'm gone," he told her as Barry staggered
|
|
out of the room in front of him.
|
|
"Great," she said clearly into her pillow. He was sure she was out like
|
|
a light before he even left the room.
|
|
|
|
As he came back down the hall, he noticed that the light was on in the
|
|
room he'd used last night; Mulder knew who was in there. This was the only
|
|
guest room. She had to be waiting for him.
|
|
"Waiting for me?" he asked as he pushed the door open.
|
|
She sprawled across a papa-san, a hardback book cradled against her
|
|
stomach, with a lamp shining on it from over one shoulder; the light also
|
|
glinted off her hair, her nails, the silk of her shirt, her skin.
|
|
"No, just ducking out for a bit. Everyone else seems to have crapped
|
|
out. I often stay here overnight. I'm sorry, I didn't realize you must be
|
|
sleeping in here."
|
|
Yeah right, he thought to himself. Openly he admired her pose. "Very
|
|
Rubenesque."
|
|
"Yeah, if Ruben's models had had shoulders like a Green Bay Packer."
|
|
She let the book fall open on her stomach. "Come on in."
|
|
She didn't rise, and as he approached her he had the distinct
|
|
impression that he was the supplicant approaching the throne of the queen.
|
|
He leaned over her, braced himself with a hand against the wall over
|
|
her head, said softly, "I wish you'd leave her alone, Carey."
|
|
"We had a nice day together, that's all, Mulder." Her voice was equally
|
|
soft. "She has an amazing capacity for keeping her mind open to ... extreme
|
|
possibilities."
|
|
"Doesn't she though."
|
|
"She does, Mulder. It impresses me, as I'm sure it impresses you. But
|
|
can anyone equal *your* devotion to Absolute Truth? Nevah," she finished
|
|
dramatically, the back of one hand pressed against her forehead in a mock
|
|
swoon.
|
|
"If you're only trying to use her to get to me, Carey..."
|
|
Her hand dropped. She stared up at him, hazel eyes on hazel eyes, a
|
|
faint flush of pink burning her cheeks. "Mulder," she said, and her voice was
|
|
deep, quiet, and vibrating with vehemence, "your moments of blindness, like
|
|
your moments of insight, are absolutely breathtaking in scope."
|
|
Dropping his hand, he straightened.
|
|
In one fluid movement she rose to her feet, face to his face. "I've
|
|
always admired the size of your ego, Mulder, but you've outdone yourself."
|
|
"Carey, I'm sorry, but I thought--"
|
|
"I know what you thought. You're very cute when you're transparent, you
|
|
know." Hooking two fingers in the waistband of his faded Levi's, she pulled him
|
|
closer, against her. "Don't you think that if this was what I wanted to do, I'd
|
|
just do it, Mulder?"
|
|
He looked down at her. Their eyes were completely different colors now,
|
|
his cool brown while hers flashed green.
|
|
"I misunderstood the backrub, then. Sorry." His voice was still soft,
|
|
cool, and calm.
|
|
"Jealous over a backrub?" She reached both hands up to his collarbone,
|
|
reaching over to knead the muscles at the back of his neck gently. "All you
|
|
have to do is ask." Continuing across the expanse of his shoulders, her
|
|
fingers, strong and warm and dry against his bare skin, dug into his biceps,
|
|
the spot in the triceps that always ached so pleasantly when massaged, and
|
|
down; she raked her thumbnails lightly across the hollow inside each elbow,
|
|
causing a shudder to run up his spine before she massaged the cords of muscle
|
|
that ran down each forearm.
|
|
This was a place they'd been to before. Now they were on familiar
|
|
ground.
|
|
Taking one of his hands, brown against her pale ones, in hers, she
|
|
pressed both thumbs into his palm, massaged outward, and turned it to kiss the
|
|
palm, looking at him through his own fingers, flicking just the tip of her
|
|
tongue to taste the salt of the palm.
|
|
"It says, been there, done that, seen the movie, read the book," he
|
|
answered her, still with a voice soft, cool and calm.
|
|
She shook her head, more amazed than chagrined. Dropping his hand she
|
|
slid both of hers under the jersey he still wore, splaying her fingers against
|
|
his skin as she slid them upward over his ribcage. Beneath her fingers she
|
|
could feel a heart hammering against his ribs. It wasn't that she didn't get to
|
|
him. She knew on some level she did.
|
|
"Are you going to tell me you wouldn't do this to Jonesie?"
|
|
He smiled, now, for the first time since he'd come in the room. "You
|
|
know I am."
|
|
"And it would have as little effect as usual to tell you that I wish
|
|
you'd let me make that decision?"
|
|
"I 'spect so."
|
|
Half-grinning, she shook her head again. "Didn't anyone ever tell you
|
|
that nice guys finish last, Mulder?"
|
|
"I'm a nice guy -- I do finish last," he couldn't resist the bait.
|
|
Laughing out loud, she leaned closer, fitting the curve of his hips
|
|
into hers, breathing lightly on the column of his throat, "Do tell."
|
|
At last his hands came up, closing on her upper arms and pushing her
|
|
back, gently but abruptly. "You're not going to give me a moment for a gracious
|
|
retreat, are you?"
|
|
"Tsk, tsk, tsk. Always running away."
|
|
He let the breath he'd been holding rush out in a smothered burst of
|
|
laughter, trying to keep it quiet. "Carey, I have to go. You're a good friend
|
|
and you know damn well this 'isn't my scene'. And it's not who we are."
|
|
Relaxing back away from him, she folded her arms across her chest, the
|
|
only sign that the rejection would hurt her. "Yeah, yeah, yadda yadda yadda,"
|
|
she mumbled. "It's not who _you_ are."
|
|
Eyebrows racing each other up his forehead, Mulder pushed her chin up
|
|
with a closed fist. She was frowning but her eyes had a spark of a smile in the
|
|
corners. "If it weren't just a game, I'd --"
|
|
Cocking her head to one side, her eyes asked him to finish the sentence
|
|
but she could see that nothing could make him. She said nothing, examined her
|
|
nails with a successfully nonchalant air.
|
|
"I," Mulder said raggedly, "am going to bed. To *sleep*. Hopefully."
|
|
Carey looked up. "Another good reason --"
|
|
A choked laugh and Mulder had backed toward the door. "Carey. Good
|
|
night."
|
|
|
|
He saw the light was still on in the guest room when he padded back up
|
|
the hall from the bathroom to the living room. He wasn't going back in there
|
|
again, even to kick her out.
|
|
Scully was curled up on the sofa. She'd peeled off her black stockings
|
|
at some point, and her toes were tucked beneath one another. The couch pillow
|
|
was bunched under her head.
|
|
The air conditioning was still going full blast. Mulder unfolded the
|
|
light cotton blanket he'd scrounged from the hall closet and spread it over
|
|
her.
|
|
As the fabric fell over her Scully made a small noise deep in her
|
|
throat, something between a mutter, a moan and a squeak of protest. The sound
|
|
of it made her seem vulnerable and lost.
|
|
Something inside him pulled at the sound; a straining, toward or away,
|
|
Mulder couldn't make out because it startled him and before he could decide
|
|
what it was, it was gone. Well, pillow, bed, he thought to himself. Throwing
|
|
the other couch pillow on the floor, Mulder unfolded the afghan over him. It
|
|
was too short and left his feet uncovered. He could try to swap with Scully but
|
|
suddenly he was too tired to get up and make that whole effort. He fell back on
|
|
the pillow, turning his head, expecting to be kept up by the ever churning mess
|
|
of thoughts that lived inside his head and rarely let him sleep.
|
|
But he'd processed a lot of alcohol that night, and his body had had
|
|
enough of the ups and downs of the day. Not to mention all that walking. He
|
|
slept.
|
|
|
|
Mulder seldom dreamed. He remembered thinking during the night. His
|
|
brain worked through his unconscious hours on his conscious thoughts; when he
|
|
awoke, he recalled this, and his thinking went on uninterrupted. It didn't
|
|
matter what he was thinking about; he thought.
|
|
Tonight he dreamed.
|
|
Unlike thoughts, his dreams had no words. His dreams were all about
|
|
warmth, silky warmth, surrounding him from all sides. He had an oddly familiar
|
|
heavy ache in the pit of his stomach. It looked dark, like the kind of dark he
|
|
saw behind his eyelids, with vague shapes; light soft sounds in a birdvoice, a
|
|
catvoice, a woman's voice, fluttered around him. The sensations were
|
|
maddeningly vague; was he pressed against her? Touching her, stroking her? He
|
|
ached and the ache intensified but couldn't concentrate; it went on and on
|
|
until it nearly, only nearly caused him pain; it was exquisite and he felt as a
|
|
touch could make him explode. That was the excruciating pinpoint that started
|
|
to lift him out of the layers of his sleep, turning over, curling around the
|
|
throbbing sensation, realizing with part of his waking conscious mind that of
|
|
course one never orgasmed in dreams, not without real stimulation, a drowsier
|
|
part of his brain thinking he was damn close all the same.
|
|
He woke himself up then, drowsy and warm until his conscious mind
|
|
kicked back into gear and his eyes flew open, appalled. Red hair?
|
|
The sun was slanting in the window behind his head and slashing across
|
|
his face; he creaked to his feet to let the venetian blind down before it
|
|
reached Scully. The large tabby cat with which Phillip had buffed Carter's face
|
|
yesterday strolled by, rubbed experimentally against Mulder as though perhaps
|
|
Mulder might produce food, and then when he didn't, strolled away again in good
|
|
humor.
|
|
Pinpricks were stabbing the backs of his eyeballs and Mulder couldn't
|
|
figure out whether he felt more embarrassed or more dismayed. What was with him
|
|
today? Or yesterday and today, he thought, watching the dawn sun climb higher
|
|
and figuring that if every day after a bad night's sleep melted into every
|
|
other day, he could count his days per year in the dozens.
|
|
Suddenly the thought that had been lurking in his mind behind the beer
|
|
and the annoyance with Carey announced itself.
|
|
"--it's following me -- I just do what it says--"
|
|
Carey had interviews with subjects who claimed to have encountered the
|
|
demon at various points over the last ten years. All of them reported more of a
|
|
sense of a presence than a sensation of being followed. All of them reported an
|
|
encounter with the presence at points in the building, not always the same
|
|
point in each case but always the same point in each _encounter_. Each and
|
|
every interviewee reported that the demon had been avoidable by leaving it,
|
|
though there were conflicting reports, understandably vague, telling how one
|
|
went about doing that.
|
|
"The *demon* is stationary," Mulder thought to himself, rubbing his
|
|
face with his hands to get the blood going. "It doesn't follow people around.
|
|
So was Benston talking through his hat, or was he talking about another demon?"
|
|
He had shed the gold earrings at some point but was still wearing his
|
|
butchered jersey; he exchanged it now for a whole shirt and, pulling the
|
|
apartment door firmly shut after him, slid out of the apartment.
|
|
|
|
When Scully awoke the first thing she thought was that something had to
|
|
be done immediately about the vile coating in her mouth; the second was that
|
|
she was surprisingly comfortable sleeping in the clothes she'd worn out last
|
|
night.
|
|
"Hurrah for spandex," she muttered and swung her feet off the couch.
|
|
"Oh good, you're up," Stasia smiled her good-morning as she came in.
|
|
"We've been tiptoeing around trying not to wake you up."
|
|
"Have you been up long?" Scully squinted around, trying to locate a
|
|
clock.
|
|
"It's about ten. I've gotten used to getting up at this time for work
|
|
and Phillip just never sleeps through my getting up, even when he's had a
|
|
drunken and debauched night the night before." Stasia placed a ceramic cow full
|
|
of cream on the table, and retreated with a hairbrush to the couch Scully had
|
|
just vacated, settling in and beginning to tackle untangling her mane of waving
|
|
dark hair.
|
|
"Um," Scully said lucidly and grabbed her bag to take with her to the
|
|
bathroom, hoping it wasn't in use. It wasn't. Surveying herself in the mirror,
|
|
Scully felt a slight shock. She was wearing tight, shiny clothes, her makeup
|
|
looked slept in and her hair was tousled. She looked like the day after a
|
|
particularly tawdry night before. Not that she had great experience with how
|
|
she looked after a tawdry night before, especially since she'd started working
|
|
with Fox Mulder, the 24-hour Energizer Agent.
|
|
Hey, where was Mulder?
|
|
"Dana, there's clean towels in the cupboard, help yourself," Stasia
|
|
called softly through the door after a tap.
|
|
"Thanks," Dana replied absently. Mulder had steered her to the couch;
|
|
what had happened to him after that? Didn't Carey have an apartment in this
|
|
building?
|
|
Well.
|
|
Stripping off her clothes quickly and efficiently, folding them as she
|
|
went, Dana dragged a comb through her hair to detangle it a bit and turned on
|
|
the hot water, then the cold in the shower stall.
|
|
When she was through showering, brushing her teeth and changing into
|
|
her own clothes, she felt much more human but she still hadn't shed the nagging
|
|
feeling that she wished she knew where Mulder was.
|
|
She had just emerged from the bathroom when she bumped into Stasia.
|
|
"Oh," the darker woman said, "I was just coming to tell you that Mulder
|
|
wasn't here when we woke up."
|
|
"Ah... thanks." Scully hoped she didn't look as nonplused as she felt.
|
|
Stasia regarded her thoughtfully for a minute, one hand clasping the
|
|
end of an unfinished braid. She smiled and added in her soft, unobtrusive
|
|
voice, "When you see him, tell him it wasn't his dream."
|
|
"Pardon me?" Scully's reactions were a little slow and Stasia had
|
|
disappeared down the hall again before Scully was finished blinking.
|
|
Later, later, later. For now, where was Mulder?
|
|
For the first time that morning, Scully hoped he was at Carey's place.
|
|
|
|
Mulder was never methodical -- except when he was working. It was only
|
|
the fact that he was working almost all the time that ever gave people the
|
|
impression that he was naturally a methodical person.
|
|
Again he had begun at the topmost floor, this time walking not only
|
|
around the hallways of each floor but into each side room that he could get
|
|
into. He investigated broom closets and fire escapes. The day was warming up
|
|
and the old Philadelphia building was beginning to gather heat from the sun and
|
|
from the asphalt's reflection. Working his way down the building Mulder brushed
|
|
a drop of sweat from his forehead and frowned. What was he looking for?
|
|
By the time he reached the basement he was warm and irritated. Another
|
|
wild goose chase for Mulder, he thought. Chalk another one up on the side of
|
|
reason; another loss for generalized insanity.
|
|
Fuse boxes, yep. Electricity meters, hot water heaters, yep. Washers
|
|
and dryers, the coin-fed kind; a garbage chute, an empty wooden crate, some
|
|
boxes.
|
|
In one corner a dark mass pressed against the glass of a basement
|
|
window, the kind that looked out into a box-shaped indentation in the sidewalk.
|
|
Mulder got closer and examined it. It was a plant, some sort of plant with
|
|
glossy dark green leaves, and it was pressed against the glass sucking up all
|
|
the sunlight it could reach.
|
|
It looked like it might be sprouting out of a crack in the wall or the
|
|
floor, watered by the dampness that clung to the inside of the concrete
|
|
basement wall; but Mulder didn't want to touch it. Its leaves looked thick and
|
|
impervious.
|
|
Was that a sound behind him?
|
|
Whirling away from the window Mulder peered into the shadows behind
|
|
him, slapping his hand on a gun that wasn't there. No, no noise. Or at least,
|
|
not now. *Had* that been a sound?
|
|
He walked toward the darkness.
|
|
Was that another plant crouched in there, a darker shape in the dark?
|
|
No, how could it have grown in the dark? How would it have lived, what would it
|
|
have fed upon?
|
|
A prickling sensation on the back of his neck made him whirl again, but
|
|
there was nothing there.
|
|
Turning back to the shadows, he peered more closely. It seemed as
|
|
though there was something deep in the corner but he couldn't see and was
|
|
reluctant to move closer.
|
|
There was that sound again. Mulder jumped and realized he'd been
|
|
holding his breath.
|
|
Rubbing sweating palms against his thighs, he moved closer.
|
|
It was cold and damp in the deeper recesses of the basement, chilling
|
|
the summer sweat on his back and making his hands, his throat feel numb. His
|
|
pupils dilated fully and still he could not discern the outline of whatever it
|
|
was there, in front of him.
|
|
Cold, very cold.
|
|
He felt as if the blood in his veins was flowing colder and colder,
|
|
slowing like slush, and his heart had to pound harder and harder to force it
|
|
through his skin, his arms and legs; his stomach felt like a quivering bowl of
|
|
jelly, the nauseating sensation making him breathe faster in an attempt not to
|
|
throw up. He thought he could hear, or feel, more sounds behind him, slight
|
|
scraping sounds, high-pitched sounds on the threshold of his perception, but he
|
|
could not bring himself to turn his back again, nor could he bring himself to
|
|
ignore them.
|
|
His right hand opened and closed, convulsively, repeatedly, looking for
|
|
something to grasp, looking for a weapon.
|
|
Feeling as though he lifted a ton of lead with the effort, he picked up
|
|
one foot, and could only put it down, slightly ahead of where it had been.
|
|
Slightly ahead.
|
|
|
|
By noon the sunlight no longer streamed straight inside the apartment's
|
|
picture window. One could sit on the furniture and watch TV or read without
|
|
being blinded by the light. But Scully couldn't do either.
|
|
"Something's wrong," she said.
|
|
"What?" yelled Phillip, and turned down the Tibetan monk's chants on
|
|
the stereo, but at that point the doorbell rang.
|
|
Stasia jumped up to let whoever it was in, and returned down the long
|
|
hallway with Carey behind her.
|
|
"Hey all," the woman greeted them, bright and rosy and clearly having
|
|
just stirred from her apartment. "Everybody sleep off the effects of the demon
|
|
liquor?"
|
|
Scully didn't waste any time. "Isn't Mulder with you?"
|
|
Carey blinked. "Nope. Did you think he was?"
|
|
"I'm going out to find him," Scully said decisively, swinging her bag
|
|
over her shoulder and standing up. "Any idea where I might look for him?"
|
|
"You haven't seen him all day?" Carey mused. "Well, this is Mulder
|
|
we're talking about, I suppose he's on the case."
|
|
"Where might that be?"
|
|
"I can give you the address of the building Benston and Carby were
|
|
living in. I can take you there, in fact; it's on the way to the doughnut
|
|
place. I'm starved."
|
|
"Well, don't let me keep you from your doughnuts," Dana said, "but I'm
|
|
going straight over there. Can you take me now or can you give me the address?"
|
|
"You really thing something's wrong, don't you?"
|
|
Dana couldn't think of any reasonable explanation for her uneasiness so
|
|
she offered none. "Yes."
|
|
"I'll go with you."
|
|
|
|
The gray old-fashioned apartment building formed a cool shadow on the
|
|
sidewalk.
|
|
"I'll start at the bottom, you start at the top, we'll work our way
|
|
towards the middle and see if we happen to find him," Scully said, feeling a
|
|
little foolish now that she had hauled Carey out to this innocuous-looking
|
|
building in the middle of the day on nothing more than an uneasy feeling.
|
|
"I'm sure we'll run into him. He can't leave a problem hanging. He
|
|
probably didn't get through the whole building yesterday and he's just being
|
|
thorough."
|
|
"For more than four hours?"
|
|
"He also can't survive without food, Dana. He may very well have gone
|
|
out for breakfast first. Food does wonders for a hangover, you know. You're a
|
|
little too jumpy. Calm down." Carey unbuttoned another button on her purple
|
|
cotton blouse and fanned herself with her hand. "If nothing else, it's too damn
|
|
hot to be so gung-ho."
|
|
"I'll meet you back here at the front door before one thirty, OK? Let's
|
|
get started."
|
|
Carey laid a hand on Dana's arm. "All right, here we go, but just
|
|
remember to be careful, OK? You don't know what you might run into."
|
|
"Do you think that someone else killed John Carby? Are you saying we
|
|
need backup assistance?" Dana's cool grey-blue eyes searched the other woman's
|
|
face. "Is there something pertinent to this murder that you haven't told
|
|
Mulder?"
|
|
"No. I'm not saying any of that. It's just a general warning, I guess.
|
|
Be careful." Carey looked down at her feet, then up at the hard, bright blue
|
|
sky and ran a hand through her hair, pushing it back from her face and sighing.
|
|
"John Carby was a student of mine. A very sweet kid. Gullible and naive, if you
|
|
know what I mean, but such a sweet kid."
|
|
Scully stood for a moment, head cocked to one side, evaluating the
|
|
mixed expressions on the older woman's face before she felt inside her bag for
|
|
her gun. "Well," Scully said, her voice low and definite, "I'm not gullible,
|
|
I'm not naive, and I'm not sweet, so I shouldn't be in any danger."
|
|
Scully nodded toward the door. "Let's go."
|
|
|
|
He had become terrified of the beating of his heart, convinced that at
|
|
any moment the vessels in his head, in his chest must burst with the furious
|
|
pounding, listening for each *thud* as it sounded, terrified that it was the
|
|
last, terrified that the next would kill him.
|
|
He crouched on the cement floor, arms wrapped around his knees, eyes
|
|
fixed straight ahead on a crack in the wall, waiting for a swarm of death to
|
|
come out of it and crawl all over him, suck death out of him.
|
|
He could not look up because he knew the blade was suspended just over
|
|
his neck, waiting to slice at the first sign of movement.
|
|
Pins and needles, lack of blood, prickled along his legs, causing
|
|
goosebumps to form, each one of them tensed in waiting.
|
|
Waiting.
|
|
Then in a rush he knew there would be no more waiting because it was
|
|
all already over. Everyone else was dead, was gone, and he was alone, all alone
|
|
in this cold damp cellar because he was the last one left alive, the last one.
|
|
And perhaps he would not die and then he would be all alone forever.
|
|
No one came because everyone was dead.
|
|
No one came because everyone had been taken away.
|
|
No one came because everyone was screaming in a spaceship somewhere
|
|
light-years away where no one could ever hear them,
|
|
where he could never hear them.
|
|
Then he wanted to die. And then, the next second, he was afraid that
|
|
the wish had been all that they were waiting for, and now that he had wished
|
|
it, he would die; and fresh cold sweat broke out on his brow and he wished he
|
|
hadn't wished that because he really did want to live.
|
|
He couldn't see. Sweat trickled into the corners of his eyes and stung
|
|
unbearably but he couldn't even blink it away because in that second of dark,
|
|
it would happen.
|
|
He wondered if the unbearable prickling sensation on the back of his
|
|
neck that went on and on longer than any horrible sensation ought to indicated
|
|
that there really was someone behind him, or maybe it was just a rat, or a bug.
|
|
The cold was eating through his sneakers into his feet, and he realized
|
|
that soon they would be numb and he would fall over into the jaws of the
|
|
darkness and it would all be over. He wished he'd worn socks.
|
|
Thud. Thud. Thud.
|
|
The pressure in his ears and the echoing sound made it impossible to
|
|
hear anything real. Fighting to breathe and yet to control his breathing he
|
|
gasped, and one thudding sound became irregular with the other.
|
|
One was his heartbeat. One was someone walking towards him.
|
|
He couldn't die in the dark. He couldn't stand it. He had to look.
|
|
Turning his head an inch or two he could see the doorway, far away, at
|
|
the foot of the old wooden back staircase, the thuds each heralding the fall of
|
|
a foot on that wood. The door opened with a protesting squeal; Mulder tried to
|
|
swallow the lump that leaped into his throat but instead managed only to moan.
|
|
"Mulder? Are you down here?"
|
|
Scully. Scully. Scully. He chanted it in his mind. I'm here. Run away.
|
|
I'm here. He blinked. Touching one hand to the floor, he flinched, but it was
|
|
only a floor, it did not reach up and grab him and pull him down. Only a floor.
|
|
Chancing just his fingertips he balanced there, two feet tight together,
|
|
crouching, fingertips of one hand spread on the floor.
|
|
Alerted by a sound, Scully pulled her gun and, raising it at the ready,
|
|
advanced into the dark corner. Light was streaming in a tiny basement window;
|
|
it fell on her, making it hard to see. There was no obvious threat but she
|
|
couldn't tell what might be in the shadows. She stepped forward.
|
|
The sunbeam lit her hair, a fire in the darkness, and Mulder swallowed.
|
|
"Yeah, Scully, I'm here," he rasped.
|
|
"Mulder?" Another step and she saw him. Something grabbed her stomach,
|
|
made it flip-flop. Lowering the gun she peered into the shadows behind and
|
|
around him but saw nothing. "Are you okay? What are you doing there?"
|
|
He shook his head, looked down again, closed his eyes and swallowed.
|
|
There was too much in his throat; nothing else, even small words, could pass.
|
|
He shivered as he looked up at her and held out a hand.
|
|
Another step forward and nausea gripped her. She took a deep breath.
|
|
Must be more of a hangover than she'd thought. Another.
|
|
Mulder was still holding out his hand.
|
|
Wide-eyed, Scully searched the shadows. There *must* be something
|
|
there. She had the feeling she had when she was chasing a perpetrator in the
|
|
night, in alleyways and buildings. Something could come out of any shadow at
|
|
any moment. One second of relaxed vigilance and boom, you were dead. Eyes
|
|
seemed to bloom in the back of her head and she felt she was being watched, but
|
|
a quick glance over her shoulder showed her there was nobody. She took another
|
|
step forward.
|
|
Don't believe, Mulder thought silently to himself. The hand he was
|
|
holding out to her trembled.
|
|
Scully looked again at Mulder. He was pale, shaking, wild-eyed. She
|
|
didn't think, she didn't wonder, she grabbed his hand and pulled.
|
|
He stumbled to his feet.
|
|
Not knowing why, she pulled again, and shoved him toward the door,
|
|
sweeping a level gun around the empty place as she followed.
|
|
|
|
The conference consisted of Mulder, Carey, Stasia, and a woman with
|
|
hair the color of a new penny, bright and coppery. She was slenderly built, her
|
|
hair sleeked back like bird's wings from her face, her eyes sea-green and
|
|
stormy, her mouth calm. She propped her head up on one hand, revealing short,
|
|
capable fingers with almost no nail, artist's hands, no-nonsense hands.
|
|
"All right, Mulder," she said in a pleasant voice, "just tell us what
|
|
you remember."
|
|
Mulder reported tonelessly his investigation of the building,
|
|
his investigation of the basement, the details of the point where he stopped
|
|
his investigation and his surroundings and sensations as he could recall them.
|
|
"And do you have a theory as to the cause of your hysteria, Mulder?"
|
|
Jones went on, just as calmly and pleasantly.
|
|
Stasia scratched a fountain pen across the surface of a notepad; a tape
|
|
recorder was also spinning in the center of the table. As long as they had an
|
|
investigator of Mulder's caliber working on the case, Jones had explained, they
|
|
would take the opportunity of recording as much as they could about the
|
|
incident; Carey, too, had wanted records for her files though she claimed she
|
|
was out of the business of academia now. Even knowing that the records would
|
|
only be for their personal use, Mulder was keenly aware, as he had often been
|
|
in the past, of how he was going on record -- and how he would sound to his
|
|
superiors at the Bureau.
|
|
"I think the hysterical episode could be explained as a concatenation
|
|
of several factors, including sleep deprivation and the aftereffects of
|
|
overconsumption of alcohol, combined with a precarious emotional state and the
|
|
expectation of finding something, which, as you know, is a powerful
|
|
hallucinogen in itself." He tried to add a half grin but his heart wasn't in
|
|
it.
|
|
"You associated the severe fear response with a specific physical
|
|
location in the room, Mulder?"
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
"Do you think you could locate on a blueprint the location associated
|
|
with this episode?"
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
Jones leaned back in her chair, appeared to examine her nails for a
|
|
moment, then leaned forward again. "Do you think this experience might shed any
|
|
light on, or have any relevance to, the murder of John Carby? Don't feel like
|
|
we're pressuring you to draw conclusions, Mulder, we're not. We just want -- I
|
|
just want your opinion."
|
|
Mulder closed his eyes for a minute. The inchoate shapes behind his
|
|
lids frightened him and he had to open them again.
|
|
"The experience does not match any of Benston's testimony. I had no
|
|
experience of words, of anything being told to me. I can attest that the
|
|
episode has some residual ... aftermath. The cumulative effects of exposure
|
|
to... of experience of such an episode might well result in a sort of paranoia
|
|
similar to that Benston seems to exhibit. I can't imagine what the combined
|
|
effects of... such an episode and drug use, specifically use of hallucinogens,
|
|
might be, but pure speculation would suggest that it wouldn't be good." Mulder
|
|
tapped his finger on the table, eyes down.
|
|
"That's fine." Jones nodded. "Is there anything else you can think of
|
|
that might be of use to us? Is there anything else about this experience, or
|
|
your investigation of the case, that you want us to know?"
|
|
There was a long silence and the hiss of the spinning tape recorder
|
|
seemed to embarrass them all.
|
|
"Uh -- I suppose I would add that, in my official capacity, if that
|
|
were what I was acting in, I would say that whatever it is down there in the
|
|
basement had nothing directly to do with Carby's death. Unofficially, though, I
|
|
would say that whatever it is, it's one nasty motherfucker and it can't be
|
|
doing anyone any good."
|
|
Her sea-green eyes stared at him, and she nodded. She and Stasia
|
|
exchanged some glances that seemed to be part of a private conversation and
|
|
then she rose. "I gotta make some phone calls, Mulder," she said in a pleasant
|
|
alto that was somehow completely unlike the voice she had used just a moment
|
|
ago. "I'll see you before you go, OK?"
|
|
Stasia slid out of her chair but Carey made no move at all. Mulder,
|
|
realizing they were leaving her alone in the room with him, widened his eyes
|
|
and looked at Jones, but she was smiling and left.
|
|
Smiling, he leaned his elbows on the table, shaking his head. "You
|
|
don't believe, do you, Carey?"
|
|
She smiled at him, but there was something sad under the smile. "It's
|
|
dangerous to believe, Mulder."
|
|
His smile faded. "I suppose." A pause. Then, stumbling over the words
|
|
because he was afraid that they wouldn't make any sense, he said, "Do you
|
|
suppose Scully knows that?"
|
|
"The danger of believing? Or the danger of _your_ believing?" Carey
|
|
rose, gallantly waved him to the door, refusing to continue the conversation.
|
|
"You used to be a clearer thinker than that, Mulder."
|
|
|
|
Two main events were happening at the same time, one overt, the other
|
|
not covert but not obvious. Chinese take-out had been brought in. Jones, Stasia
|
|
and several other women were partaking, and objects like lanterns and incense
|
|
were being gathered into bags. "We're going to deal with it," Jones said
|
|
quietly to Mulder and helped him to some cashew chicken.
|
|
In the general noise a private conversation could be had. Carey picked
|
|
up a cardboard container of orange spicy beef and carried it over to the corner
|
|
where Scully balanced a plate of fried rice on her lap.
|
|
"If you haven't tried this yet, you haven't lived," Carey said, and
|
|
dumped some on Scully's plate.
|
|
"Mmm," was Scully's response as she tasted it, her eyes smiling and
|
|
indicating the hassock near her.
|
|
Carey sat down and leaned in conspiratorially. "You're not doing it
|
|
right, you know," she said and picked up a sliver of meat with her chopsticks.
|
|
"I can't eat with those, it would take me all night!" Dana laughed.
|
|
"It tastes better if you go slowly," Carey murmured and fed her the
|
|
piece in her chopsticks.
|
|
Eyes sparkling with silent laughter, Scully had to shake her head.
|
|
Carey laughed out loud and picked out a piece for herself. "So, you're
|
|
driving back tonight?"
|
|
"It's not so long a drive, really. We both have to be at work
|
|
tomorrow."
|
|
"And you work in different offices now?"
|
|
A frown flitted across Scully's face. "Yes, we do."
|
|
Carey nodded to Mulder's jeans-clad form, huddled at the table over the
|
|
collection of cartons. "You'll look after him, though, won't you?"
|
|
Thoughtfully Scully licked a bit of sauce from her lips. "He'll be
|
|
okay, don't you think?"
|
|
"Oh sure. But, you know, okay is such a relative thing. He's the last
|
|
of the pilgrims, in a way; sort of the last of the modern mystics. And the last
|
|
of the old-fashioned gentlemen, I have to say."
|
|
"Really."
|
|
Carey could tell Dana didn't want any of her interest to show. "Really.
|
|
Not too old-fashioned to have dirty thoughts, but old-fashioned enough to be
|
|
embarrassed by them, if you know what I mean."
|
|
"I don't think I do."
|
|
"Well, don't worry about it, then." Carey licked the sauce from her own
|
|
fingers, and said, "You don't ever have dirty thoughts, do you, Agent Scully?"
|
|
Coolly Scully handed the other woman a napkin. "Not on the job."
|
|
Mulder turned around then and saw them, side by side in front of the
|
|
picture window, a dark blue edged with purple from the sunset. Carey's dark
|
|
head and Scully's bright one leaned close together, and they were laughing.
|
|
Scully looked up at that moment and saw him looking at them. She came over to
|
|
him, piled more snow peas and rice on her plate, and said, "I was supposed to
|
|
tell you that it wasn't your dream."
|
|
He turned to examine the noodles rather than to hide the slight flush
|
|
along his cheekbones. "Thank God."
|
|
"You going to tell me what that means?"
|
|
"Nope. Hey, this stuff has sunflower seeds in it. Have some."
|
|
She pushed some rice around on her plate. "As long as you tell me
|
|
everything I need to know, I suppose I can live with that."
|
|
His head bent over hers. "Even the stuff you don't believe?"
|
|
"Especially the stuff I don't believe." And she smiled.
|
|
|
|
They drove out of town, each in their seperate cars, with Dana
|
|
following Mulder until they reached 95; then they lost one another, somebody
|
|
driving too fast for somebody else or somebody taking a different route. It
|
|
didn't matter, they'd talk to each other tomorrow.
|
|
They had already reached their respective homes when the procession
|
|
threaded its way through the dark streets of downtown Philadelphia, a group of
|
|
shining heads, red, black, golden blond hair, over black robes with sleeves
|
|
that reached down for the ground. One woman carried a burning stick of incense,
|
|
one a silver cup, one a small iron pot filled with glowing coals, one a similar
|
|
small pot filled with powdery clay. Under her robe, Jones carried a glass
|
|
bottle of water and another of Laphroaig for libations, because the Goddess she
|
|
knew liked Scotch, and she herself preferred single malt. Also, she thought to
|
|
herself, alcohol is appropriate to pour on wounds, and it's the wound of a city
|
|
we've got to heal. A bronze knife gleaming with garnets flashed with the
|
|
reflected light of her candle lantern when her robe parted in the evening
|
|
breeze. The faces of all the women looked strong, purposeful, and they walked
|
|
together into the shadowy gray building and disappeared from view.
|
|
|
|
*********************
|
|
Epilogue
|
|
October, 1994
|
|
FBI Headquarters
|
|
Washington, D.C.
|
|
|
|
"Especially the stuff I don't believe." That was the smile that he
|
|
remembered now, sitting in his basement, ignoring the tapes spinning lazily
|
|
free on the reel-to-reel machine, to all appearances staring into space but
|
|
staring into that smile.
|
|
The danger of believing. He hadn't been able to stop it like she had.
|
|
The cold of the dim basement office had begun to seep into the floor
|
|
and he could feel it through the soles of his shoes, heralding the end of an
|
|
unusually mild Indian summer. It made him shiver.
|
|
He was strong in his believing but believing made him weak. He hadn't
|
|
been able to save her from his fear the way she'd saved him from it, just by
|
|
being there, by being real, by refusing to question at the right moment and
|
|
refusing to answer with anything less than could be proved.
|
|
He shuffled the newspaper clippings around on the table. They told
|
|
about Russ Benston's psychiatric evaluation, trial, and conviction. One
|
|
described John Carby's funeral. Dead at twenty-three. Family and friends
|
|
bereft. Another senseless murder that meant so little in the larger scheme of
|
|
things but was in itself a limitless vista of horror, of chance and of fear.
|
|
Alone in his office, Mulder picked up the phone.
|
|
"Carey? Hi. Yes, I'm calling and it isn't even Christmas. Just wanted
|
|
to hear your voice. Hey, can't a friend call every now and again for no
|
|
reason?"
|
|
|
|
But I'm the only one
|
|
Who'll walk across the fire for you...
|
|
......
|
|
|
|
It's only fear that makes you run
|
|
The demons that you're hiding from
|
|
When all your promises are done
|
|
I'm the only one...*
|
|
|
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
|
|
Lyrics by Melissa Etheridge
|
|
"I'm the Only One"
|
|
_Yes I Am_, 1994
|
|
Real rock'n'roll without which I never would have written/finished this story.
|
|
Turn it up loud.
|
|
|