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