From: ephemeral@ephemeralfic.org Date: 23 Feb 2002 16:44:31 -0000 Subject: Residual Damage by dtg Source: direct Reply To: dgoggans@earthlink.net Title: Residual Damage Author: dtg Email: dgoggans@earthlink.net Website: http://home.earthlink.net/~dgoggans/ Rating: PG Spoilers: Pusher Keywords: MT, MSR, Sk/M/S friendship Summary: Mulder's encounter with Modell is over. Or is it? Archive: After the Fact, Ephemeral. Others please ask first. Feedback: Welcome, encouraged and always acknowledged. Disclaimer: The characters belong to Chris Carter, 1013 and Fox. No copyright infringement is intended. Author's Notes: This story came from an idea Vickie Moseley gave me. She wondered what ill effects Mulder might have suffered from his experience. I filled in the blanks. Thanks, Vickie!! Revised and reposted for the After the Fact post ep challenge list. Special thanks to Michelle for her always- amazing beta. ********************************************************* Residual Damage ******* Fairfax Mercy Hospital Fairfax, VA Friday, 2:40 PM "Mulder, I need you to answer me." He had his face covered with both hands, his elbows braced hard against his knees. Scully crouched next to his chair with her hand resting lightly on his shoulder. The muscles beneath her trembling fingers were rigid with shock, resonating with the adrenaline still flooding his body in the aftermath of his struggle against Modell. A struggle she was not yet sure he had won. "Agent Scully, is he all right? Do you need any help?" Brophy stood uncertainly in the half-open doorway. He had cleared out his SWAT team to give Mulder some privacy, but now seemed reluctant to leave her alone with him. "Just give us a few minutes, please." She flashed him the most reassuring smile she could muster. "We'll be fine. Really." Brophy hesitated a moment longer, then nodded. "I'll be in the ER if you need me. Modell's still a prisoner, dying or not." She kept the smile firmly in place until the door closed softly behind him. "Mulder, I need you to talk to me. Please." He slowly lowered his hands but kept his face turned from her. "I'm sorry." The words were so soft, so strained, she almost missed them. "Oh, Mulder, you have nothing to be sorry for." She began to rub her hand up and down his back. The muscles on either side of his spine were knotted as tightly as his shoulders, and he was cold. So cold. "You were right, Scully. I should never have come in here by myself." He drew a shaky breath. "My ego almost cost you your life." "No, Mulder--" "YES!" The word exploded from him, sharp and raw. He immediately grabbed his head with both hands, his face twisted in pain. Mulder! What's wrong?" She had to grab his shoulders to keep him from tumbling out of the chair. He panted for a moment, eyes squeezed tightly shut. When he opened them she saw tears clustered against his lower lashes. "It's a headache, Scully. I'm okay, I just gotta remember not to yell for awhile." Barely above a whisper, but it made him wince again. She moved quickly to kneel in front of him, lifting his chin with gentle fingers to examine his eyes. Despite the strong afternoon sunlight pouring through the window at her back, his pupils were huge. "Can you describe the pain, Mulder? Is it concentrated in one area? In the back or the front?" A terrifying array of possibilities ran quickly through her mind. An aneurysm from the strain of fighting Modell, for one. "A headache is the least of my problems." He sat up straight against the chair back and tipped his head from side to side, carefully stretching the muscles of his neck. The movement spilled a tear from the corner of his left eye, and Scully reached automatically to brush it away with her thumb. He grabbed her wrist, refusing the comfort she offered. "I shot an unarmed man and I nearly killed *you*. You can't protect me from the consequences this time, and I'm not going to let you try." "Modell was far from unarmed and you know it. So does Brophy." Mulder tried to turn away but she pulled him back to face her. "There won't *be* any consequences, not unless you insist on devising your own. Please don't do this to yourself." They were silent for a long moment, each trying to read the other's eyes, until an involuntary wince from Mulder drew her attention back to the discomfort he was trying to ignore. She placed two fingers against the pulse point on his left wrist and counted the racing beats, earning an exasperated sigh from her patient. "Scully, I have a headache. Put it in park, will you?" He pulled his wrist back and stood up-- a bit too quickly as it turned out. He listed abruptly to the right and had to steady himself by gripping her shoulder. "I stood up too fast. Don't look at me like that." He let go and stepped around her, heading for the door. He hadn't made it halfway when he had to grab for the chair Scully had occupied during the confrontation with Modell. This time, his knees buckled and would have dropped him to the floor if Scully hadn't reached him first. Holding him firmly by both biceps, she used her command voice. "All right, Mulder. That's enough. We're not going anywhere until we get you checked out." He opened his mouth to protest but she rolled right over him. "Now you can either let me help you walk to the ER, or you can continue with this charade until you fall flat on your ass." He straightened his shoulders and tried to recover his dignity. "Fine." Fifteen minutes later, Mulder was sitting on a gurney in Treatment Room #4, his lips pressed around a thermometer. A middle-aged, no nonsense nurse stood in front of him watching the gauge as air hissed from the deflating blood pressure cuff on his left arm. "Your pressure is somewhat elevated, Mr. Mulder. I'd like you to sit quietly for ten minutes and I'll come back to take it again." She removed the thermometer from his mouth and held it up the light. "Normal." She made some notations on his chart and placed it back in the holder attached to the bedrail. "The doctor will be in to see you shortly." With that, she left the room and closed the door behind her. Scully walked over and picked up the chart, reviewing the nurse's notes although she had seen the readings as they were being taken. His blood pressure was 180 over 112, too high for a man as fit as Mulder, but not dangerously so. His symptoms weren't even unexpected considering the trauma he'd just been through. There was no real basis for her alarm, yet she couldn't shake the feeling that something was terribly wrong. "How's the headache?" She returned the chart to its holder and watched him closely for a moment. The lines around his eyes told her he was still in pain, but she could see the lie forming on his lips before the words left his mouth. "It's fine, Scully. Can we just get the hell out of here, please?" He was absently rubbing at the back of his neck with his right hand. When he realized she was watching him, he dropped the hand immediately to his lap. "Look, I just need to get out of here." He suddenly sounded exhausted. "Mr. Mulder?" The door opened and a fifty-ish, balding man in blue scrubs entered. "I'm Doctor Harmon, ER attending physician. I understand we have you to thank for ending the siege this afternoon." He crossed to Mulder and picked up the chart. "Guilty as charged." She knew he'd meant that as a joke, but the hollow tone chilled her. "I don't suppose I can play on your gratitude for a pass out of here?" He shot a baleful look in Scully's direction. "My partner is overreacting to a headache." "Under the circumstances, I wouldn't call it overreacting." He closed the chart and studied his patient's face. "You experienced some dizziness?" "I stood up too fast and lost my balance. There's nothing wrong with me that getting out of here wouldn't cure." Scully had heard that explanation one too many times, and it showed in her voice. "Doctor, I'd like you to do a neuro evaluation. 'Standing up too quickly' might account for the initial dizziness, but it hardly explains the way he staggered all the way down here." She ignored Mulder's glare and focused her attention on the doctor. "He's exhibiting symptoms of neurological trauma and I just think it's wise to rule out anything serious." She shot a glance in Mulder's direction, long enough to see the fury that had replaced his moroseness. *At least he's not wallowing in guilt for the moment.* Harmon nodded. "I agree." He turned to Mulder. "This will only take a few minutes and then we can all relax." Back to Scully. "Would you mind stepping outside?" No matter how politely it was phrased, she was being ordered out of the room. Scully's first reaction was outrage, but she had to admit that the doctor was probably right. Mulder would be more likely to cooperate without her there to inspire more of his macho posturing. "Of course. I'll be right outside." She chanced another look at her partner. As long as he was okay, she really didn't care how angry he was about this. She walked out and closed the door behind her. *** "I'll drive, Mulder." She held out her hand for the keys, one eyebrow raised against any resistance he might care to offer. Mulder weighed his choices and opted for expedience. He just wanted to get home and if letting his partner drive them there shaved time off the process, he was all for it. He dropped the keys into her hand and settled into the passenger side of the car, pulling the door closed with a barely restrained slam. If Scully was surprised by his acquiescence, she hid it well. Neither spoke until Scully pulled up to the curb in front of his building. She turned off the engine, obviously planning to escort him to his door. "Go home, Scully." Mulder paused with his hand on the door handle. "The doctor said I'm fine. I don't need a nanny." He was still upset with her, but that had come out a lot more harshly than he'd intended. He next words were much softer. "I'm really okay, Scully. Please. Just go home and get some rest." He could see the struggle going on behind those blue eyes, and he knew the moment she made her decision. "All right, Mulder. I'll go home if you promise you'll call me if you need anything." She gave him a small smile. He returned her smile and squeezed her shoulder gently. "You know I will." He got out and closed the door, but instead of walking to his door, he turned back and tapped on the car window. She hit the button to lower it and he leaned in. "I'm sorry for being such a prick this afternoon. It's been a rough day." "Get some rest, Mulder." Her smile warmed his heart all the way to his door where he turned and waved good night. Scully sat and watched until the lights went on in his apartment. Mulder waited at the window until she pulled away. *** Mulder's apartment Saturday, 1:18 AM He woke to the bizarre sensation of falling onto his couch from a great height, his whole body jerking as he landed with a startled gasp. He lay there panting, bathed in sweat, his heart slamming against his ribs so hard that he could feel the echo pulsing behind his eyes. Must've been one hell of a nightmare, but he couldn't recall any of it. Just the fall at the end. That in itself was unusual. As a rule, he remembered every horrifying moment of his dreams and it was somehow unsettling to have this one be such a blank. He lay still, forcing his breathing to slow and deepen, counting each one the way Scully had taught him to do one night in the field. He had wakened to the sound of his own screams to see her bursting through their connecting door, gun in hand, certain he was being flayed alive. She'd sat with him for a long time that night, and out of it had come this ritual. He wanted very much to call her right now. The sound of her voice never failed to chase away the shadows, but he couldn't risk it this time. The throbbing pain in his head had returned with a vengeance and he knew she would hear it in his voice. She'd have him packed off to the ER before he could blink. *Deal with it, G-man. It's just you and me.* He felt the words rather than heard them, like trickles of ice water down his back, freezing him in place against the leather cushions and driving all rational thought from his head. *Gotta play by the rules.* Not ice water this time. Tongues of fire, consuming the air around him with a suffocating heat. Suddenly the darkness was like a physical thing, bearing down on his chest and crushing the breath from his lungs. The need to escape was overwhelming. He pushed himself up from the couch, grabbed his jacket and headed out into the night. *** Scully's apartment Saturday, 5:21 AM *'Piece of cake. Your turn.' Mulder lowers the gun, his eyes fixed on Modell's, his expression utterly blank. She pleads with him to give her the gun, but his gaze never moves from the man in front of him. In one smooth motion, he raises the gun to his temple and pulls the trigger. The spray of blood blinds her, and she wipes it away to find Mulder still in the chair. The right side of his head is destroyed, but he's finally looking at her. 'I'm cold, Scully. I'm so cold.'* She woke calling Mulder's name, her face damp with tears and something hard and cold beneath her cheek. It was the cordless phone, pressed between her ear and the pillow. Scully stared at it stupidly for a moment, and then she heard his voice. She sat up quickly and pressed the receiver to her ear. "...get me? Sc-Scully?" A thin, shaky voice, but unmistakable. "Mulder? Are you all right? Where are you?" She was wide awake now and trembling. "D-don't know...dark..." He sounded so confused, so frightened. "Describe where you are, Mulder." Her heart was hammering so hard that her ears were thumping with every beat. "N-no... Don't!" She heard the receiver clank repeatedly against a hard surface as he dropped it from his hands. His voice was suddenly far away from the mouthpiece. "NO!!", a scream that turned her blood to ice, and then silence. "Mulder! Mulder what happened?" She strained to hear what was going on at the other end of the line, but there was nothing more for nearly a minute. Then someone hung up the receiver with a soft click. A few seconds later, the dial tone returned and broke her paralysis. Scully quickly punched in *69 to redial the number that had just called her and wrote down it down as the electronic voice asked if she wanted to be connected. She waited through ten rings, growing more frightened with each hammering beat of her heart. No one was going to answer, obviously. Whatever had happened to Mulder, he was no longer able to get to the phone. She hung up and dialed Skinner. She wondered if the man ever slept. He sounded as alert as if she'd called him in the middle of the afternoon. "You have no idea where he could have been calling from?" "No, Sir. I dropped him off at his apartment yesterday evening. I have no idea why he would have gone out." "I'll get the location on this number and call you back." He hung up. She was fully dressed and ready to leave the apartment when Skinner called back a few minutes later. "He was calling from a pay phone in Bosher's Run State Park. It's in--" "I know where it is, Sir." "The Fairfax County police should be on the scene shortly. I'm on my way to your apartment right now to pick you up." "Thank you, Sir." His professional demeanor slipped for a moment. "He's okay, Dana. Just sit tight." He hung up. *** Bosher's Run State Park Manassas, VA Saturday, 6:14 AM They saw the cluster of flashing emergency lights through the partially-bare trees as Skinner turned from the main road onto the park's service drive. He pulled up behind a Fairfax County EMT van and gave Scully's arm a reassuring squeeze before they got out of the car. The phone Mulder had called from was mounted on the side of a small wooden structure that housed the public restrooms. The detective in charge of the scene introduced himself and gave them a quick rundown of what they'd learned so far. "There's no sign of a struggle, no blood or other physical evidence. Nothing other than a bunch of smudged and overlaid prints on the receiver and the surrounding surfaces." He regarded Scully's worried expression for a moment. "He's your partner?" "Yes. He called me from here less than an hour ago, very disoriented. He wanted me to come and get him, but he couldn't tell me where he was. Then it sounded as if someone grabbed the phone away, and I heard him scream." The detective's eyes went soft with sympathy, and Scully's throat tightened. *He's not dead. Don't look at me like that.* "Detective, I hope you won't be offended if I have a Bureau team process the scene as well." Skinner was punching numbers in to his cell phone as he spoke. "No, of course not." He glanced quickly at Scully. "I understand completely. My team should be finished here in a few minutes. I'd appreciate a call if you find anything we missed." He handed a business card to each of them, and went back to supervise his people. Skinner spoke into his cell phone for a few minutes while Scully walked slowly around the perimeter defined by the crime scene tape. She circled back to him as he ended the call. "It's as if he was never here." She hated the waver in her voice and consciously squared her shoulders. "I think we should check out Mulder's apartment, Sir." "I've already got a team on the way. We'll meet them there." Scully glanced back at the phone. *He's not dead. I'd know it if he was.* "Let's go." *** They were less than ten minutes from Mulder's building when Scully's cell phone rang. She fumbled it out of her jacket pocket and answered on the third ring. At her shocked gasp, Skinner pulled quickly to the side of the road and stopped the car. "What is it, Agent?" Her shock was rapidly changing to a mixture of fury and embarrassment. "It's Mulder, Sir. He wants to know what the hell's going on." *** Mulder's apartment Saturday, 8:25 AM "I was asleep on my couch when these two kicked the door in. If my gun had been within reach, we'd have a hell of a mess here right now." Mulder clearly believed he was the injured party in this debacle and Scully didn't know whether to hug him or slap him. Skinner was uncharacteristically restrained in his response. "Agent Mulder, these men were sent by me and I apologize for the confusion." He turned to Scully. "I'd like you to stop by my office on Monday morning so we can go over your statement for the Fairfax P.D." He motioned to the two agents from the crime scene investigation unit and they preceded him out of the apartment. He glanced back at Mulder and Scully, nodded and closed the door behind him. "Skinner thinks I've gone off the deep end, Mulder, and I can't say that I blame him. What the hell is going on?" Her arms were crossed over her chest, partly in anger and partly to subdue the trembling that had begun when she had realized he was safe. "You tell *me*. I went out early this morning to find something to eat, stopped at a diner and had some breakfast. Then out of nowhere I've got storm troopers kicking my door down. What brought *that* on?" They were standing toe-to-toe in the middle of the living room which meant that Scully was at a distinct height disadvantage. She had to crane her neck back to look at him and it was beginning to hurt. "Sit down, Mulder." They took positions at either end of the couch and glared at each other. "You called me, Mulder. From a pay phone in Bosher's Run park." He began to protest but she held up a hand to stop him. "Just let me finish, please." He settled back again, gesturing for her to continue before crossing his arms over his chest. "Please, go on." "What time did you leave this morning?" "A little after one." "And how long did it take to get to the diner?" "I don't know, it's only a mile or so away. Maybe five minutes." "How long were you there?" "Less than an hour. However long it takes to order, receive and eat three eggs and some hash browns. Where are you going with this?" "Mulder, you called me at 5:21 this morning from the park. Where were you for the intervening three hours?" "I didn't call you, Scully. Not from the park or anywhere else. I came back here and went to sleep." He was using that wearily patient, condescending tone that drove her up the wall. "There's a record of the time and the phone number in my caller ID. I didn't imagine it." "It wasn't me, Scully. That's all I can tell you. I assume the phone in the park was checked for prints?" He arched his eyebrows at her in that *I've got you* expression. "They weren't usable, but I don't need fingerprints to tell me it was you on the phone. You were scared, Mulder. You wanted me to come and get you, but you couldn't tell me where you were." Her voice lost some of it's assertive tone and she looked away before she continued. "Then it sounded like someone grabbed the phone away from you, and...you screamed." Telling him about that awful moment brought the memory to life, and it must have showed in her voice. Mulder's angry posture relaxed immediately. "I'm sorry, Scully." His voice was soft. "I'm sorry you were put through that. But it wasn't me. Think about it. You were probably sound asleep and just assumed it was me calling you." He touched her chin and turned her face back toward his. "It *was* the natural assumption." "But what would be the point?" Her certainty was fading into confusion. She knew he wasn't lying to her, but-- "I don't know, Scully. Maybe to get you alone in the park? When you sent the cavalry in ahead of you, whoever it was ran off. Or, it could just have been a very sick joke." It was the only thing that made sense, and she began to feel more foolish than angry. She gave him a smile that trembled a bit at the edges. "Okay, let's assume for the sake of argument that you could be right..." Mulder's eyes widened comically and he held up one hand. "Wait, please. Let me savor this moment." He paused dramatically, then waggled his eyebrows at her, and they both dissolved into relieved chuckles that swept away the last of the tension. "Scully, I knew if I lived long enough, I'd hear you say it." She narrowed her eyes in a mock glare. "Don't let it go to your head." His joy was undiminished. "To prove what a good winner I can be, I'll take you out for lunch. We just have to wait until somebody shows up to fix my door." The building manager had promised to send a repairman within the hour to put his door back together for the umpteenth time, but as one hour stretched into two, Mulder began to wonder aloud if it wasn't a sign that he'd finally worn out his welcome with the landlord. "Do you know anyone who might be looking for a roommate?" His trademark leer was firmly in place. "I may not be tidy but I'm never dull." "No, Mulder. That you are not." He'd obviously expected her customary put down, and the wistful softness in her voice seemed to throw him off balance. It had the same effect on her, and for a moment everything between them shifted. As was so often the case, their words were only a small part of the message, and what was passing between them right now simply defied description. A couple of sharp raps against what remained of the doorframe made them both jump. Mulder took a half step away from her, with what looked suspiciously like the beginnings of a blush on his cheeks and turned quickly toward the source of the sound. "Mr. Mulder, you know there was actually a time when I thought having you in the building would make us all safer." A short, grizzled little man was standing in the doorway with his arms crossed, surveying the damage. Scully had seen Mulder's building manager on a number of previous occasions, and he always reminded her of Frohike--minus the fingerless gloves and rampant paranoia. "Join the club, Mr. Allen. We all did." Scully shot her partner a wink, expecting his usual snappy comeback. Instead, she felt her breath catch at the soft emotion in his eyes. It was there for less than a heartbeat, shoved quickly down with a defensive reflex born of long practice, but there was no mistaking what she had seen, and her skin tingled in the afterglow. Mulder held her gaze for a second longer, then returned her wink and crossed the room to talk with Allen. She followed their mundane conversation about costs and responsibility with only the fringe of her awareness. Most of her brain was occupied with dissecting what had just happened, turning the moment over in her mind like a shiny stone, searching for what lay beneath. When Mulder touched her shoulder sometime later, she jumped as if he'd shouted in her ear. "Hey, Scully. You ignoring me?" His casual grin was back, and his eyes held nothing but amusement. She was blushing. She could feel it. "I was thinking about all the work I've got waiting for me at home, Mulder. What did you say?" "I asked if you wanted to grab some lunch at the Bistro. These guys are going to key the new lock to match the old one, so we don't have to hang around any longer." When she didn't react, he brought out the big guns. "My treat." ~~~~ The Bistro Reston, VA 11:20 a.m. Saturday was probably a slow lunch day, but the restaurant still seemed unusually empty. There were fewer than a dozen patrons, some at the bar, the rest in the high-backed booths around the perimeter of the cozy Italian-themed interior. Red and white checkered tablecloths, oak beamed ceilings and candles mounted in bottles bearing the melted remains of their predecessors set a mood more suited to a romantic evening than a weekend brunch. Mulder asked the hostess for a booth in the back, and they were soon studying their menus from opposite sides of the table. The thirty minute drive from Mulder's apartment had passed in near silence, with Scully too wrapped up in her own roiling emotions to make any attempt at conversation. She had no idea what had prompted him to choose this place, but he'd obviously been here before. Probably with a date, she suddenly realized, frowning at the image that thought evoked, irritated with herself for bringing it up. "Is it that bad?" She looked up to find Mulder smiling uncertainly. "What?" "I was expecting that menu to burst into flames. Is it something I did? Again?" His smile slipped a bit. "No, of course not. I--I'm just a tired." She silently cursed her imagination. "What's good? You've been here before, right?" It sounded almost like an accusation, even to her own ears. "A couple of times, yeah." He gave her an odd look, then recited the selections from memory, complete with the flowery descriptions she'd noticed printed next to each one. Their waiter appeared at that point and couldn't be dissuaded from repeating the entire list for her. She saw Mulder's grin from the corner of her eye as she listened politely to the young man's spiel. As soon as he left with their orders, Scully turned on her smirking partner. "You enjoyed that, didn't you?" She was smiling again, and it felt wonderful. Her imagination could just go take a hike. "You don't know how to be rude, Scully. It's a curse of some kind." He was chuckling softly. Their food arrived quickly, and Scully realized that she was starving. For the next ten minutes, she murmured praise for the food and Mulder's choice of restaurants between blissful mouthfuls of delicately seasoned angel hair pasta. It took much too long for her to realize that he wasn't responding. When she looked up, he had the fingers of both hands pressed against his brow ridge. "Mulder?" He dropped his hands immediately. "Are you okay?" His smile was wobbly at best. "Guess I'm tired, too. Think I'll go splash a little water on my face." He slid out of the booth and stood up, but she grabbed his wrist before he took a step. "Are you sure you're all right?" He looked down at her and winked. "I'll be right back." She leaned out of the booth and watched as he headed for an alcove near the front entrance where she'd spotted the restrooms when they came in. "Miss? Would you care for dessert?" She turned back to find their waiter standing helpfully at her elbow. "No, thank you. We'll want coffee, though, when my friend returns." The boy nodded and left. Scully leaned against the high seatback and closed her eyes. Mulder was obviously in pain, and it bothered her that he was trying to hide it. She snorted softly. Why should now be any different? Hiding their feelings from each other was one of the things they did best. "May I have your cup, Miss?" The waiter's sudden return snapped her out of her thoughts and put an edge in her voice. "I told you, we'll have coffee when my friend returns." The young man's smile vanished, and he looked uncomfortable. "Your friend, Miss? He just left. I--I thought you knew." "What?" Scully got up and ran for the front door, heedless of the waiter's pitying look. She stepped out into the parking lot, shielding her eyes against the glare. It took her a moment to locate the spot where they had parked less than an hour before, and her eyes widened in disbelief. Mulder's car was gone. *** Mulder's apartment Saturday, 2:50 PM The new lock was touchy. She was about to pull out her Bureau- issued pick by the time her well worn key finally coaxed the tumblers into place. Once inside, she shut the door and leaned against it, eyes closed. She hadn't really expected to find him here, but the reality of his empty apartment knocked the wind from her for a moment. She'd taken a taxi here from restaurant, stopping to check her own car for a note before sprinting up the stairs with the irrational hope of finding him asleep on the couch. His cell phone was turned off, the Gunmen hadn't seen him, and she was now officially out of ideas. She crossed slowly to the couch, sank down onto it and punched speed dial number three. It took less than a minute to tell the Assistant Director what little she knew. "Is it possible someone could have taken him by force?" "No, sir. The waiter saw him walk out to his car and drive away." She could almost hear her boss pinching the bridge of his nose. "And you noticed nothing unusual?" "He's experienced a couple of severe headaches since yesterday afternoon. He was checked out at the hospital, but I'm beginning to think we may have missed something." ...like an aneurysm or a stroke or a tumor. The possibilities were endless and terrifying. After the stress she'd seen him endure in his battle with Modell, anything was... "Sir, what if Modell is still influencing him somehow?" It was a Mulder-like leap that suddenly it made perfect sense. "Agent Scully, the man's in a coma." It was the same tone she'd heard him use many times with Mulder. For some reason, she found that comforting. "No, sir, he's not. I checked with the hospital last night and this morning. He's had moments of consciousness. What if the connection he had with Mulder is still in effect?" The image of Mulder with a gun to his head was suddenly so strong that she leaped up from the couch, heart thudding with dread. "Sir, we have to talk with Modell immediately." Skinner must have heard it in her voice. "I'll put out an APB on Mulder. He can't have gotten very far. Do you want me to meet you at the hospital?" "Thank you, Sir." Her relief was palpable. "I'll see you there." *** Fairfax Mercy Hospital Intensive Care Unit Saturday, 3:40 p.m. Skinner found his agent standing at Modell's bedside. She looked up when he opened the door. "His nurse heard him talking about an hour ago, but he's been unconscious since I arrived." She gestured toward the monitor on the wall above the bed. "There is definite brain activity, much more than normal for a patient with this level of brain injury. It doesn't make sense." "Unless you're right, and he's concentrating everything he has left on Mulder." As if in answer, the man in the bed moaned softly. Scully bent quickly, turning her head to listen as his lips began to move. *** Location unknown Saturday, 3:40 p.m. *Hey, G-man. You gotta let go sooner or later. Why don't you save us both a lot of time and just do it?* He was in a car. That much he could tell without opening his eyes. His hands were gripping the steering wheel so tightly that his fingers were numb and the muscles in his forearms were beginning to ache. He had no idea where the car was or why he was in it. And for a reason he couldn't name, he was terrified of finding out. *You can't hold on much longer. She doesn't want you to.* Wherever he was, wherever the *car* was, it was cold and utterly silent. The damp air penetrated his thin jacket and soaked into his bones, sending tremors through every muscle. He listened for a sound, anything that might tell him where he was, but there was nothing. No traffic noise, no wind, nothing but the voice coming from somewhere inside his head. A familiar voice that he could hear all too clearly. His head hurt in a way that made him want to bang it against something. A deep, squeezing agony that ran from his eyes to the back of his neck, pulsing with every heart beat. *It's going to keep getting worse until you let go, G-man. Trust me on this.* He didn't need to ask who the voice belonged to any more than he needed to ask what it wanted. The pain would stop when he gave in. As if to affirm his conclusion, the pulsing fire in his head surged to a level that made him gasp, then quickly ebbed. *It looks like you need a refresher. How's this?* The images flooded his mind: Scully in a coma, her reward for following him on his quest... Samantha being pulled into the light, screaming his name as he huddled on the floor and watched her go... Reggie Purdue, murdered while he talked to him on the phone by a man he should have killed the first time he had the chance... all the children who died in terror while he retched his way through their killers' profiles... *What's the tally, G-man? How many lives?* The physical pain in his head intensified along with the agony in his soul until there was nothing else... *** Mulder's apartment 6:50 p.m. Modell's heart had stopped a few minutes into his silent monologue. By the time the code team had brought him back, all brain activity on the EEG was gone. There was nothing to do now but wait, and she wanted to do it here. With Modell's influence removed, Mulder would be walking in the door any moment. She'd been certain of it two and a half hours ago. But now-- She snatched up the phone halfway through the first ring. "Dana, I just received a call from the Reston P.D. They found him in his car parked on a forestry service road off Route 29. He's on his way to Georgetown Memorial." "How is he?" Skinner's hesitation was brief, but it was enough to bring tears to her eyes. "He's alive. That's all they could tell me. I'll meet you there." *** Georgetown Memorial Hospital Trauma Unit Sunday, 2:51 AM "There's a minor bleed in the left temporal lobe." Doctor Lassiter circled the area on the lighted screen with his right index finger. "We've got that under control for the moment with medication. It's not the cause of his symptoms, however." He turned to face the man and woman seated across from him. "He's completely unresponsive to deep, painful stimulus. He's had two episodes of tachycardia that required defibrillation and his pulmonary function is sufficiently compromised that we've placed him on a ventilator. There is no physical cause that we can identify for any of this, though of course we're still doing tests." The woman was a medical doctor and the patient's partner in the FBI. The man was their supervisor. Both had listened intently to his summary, asking no questions. He folded his hands together on the desk and waited. The man spoke first. "There's no physical trauma?" The man was looking at the woman as he spoke and Lassiter was unsure who he expected to respond. When she remained silent, he repeated his earlier comments. "None whatever. There's not a mark on him." "I need to see him now." The woman looked at her supervisor, then at Lassiter. "He needs to see me." Lassiter had expected to be grilled on his diagnosis and treatment plan, especially by another physician. Her lack of curiosity was puzzling, almost as if she already knew what was wrong and had been listening to him as a courtesy. "Of course. He should be settled in ICU by now. I'll take you to him." He rose. "That won't be necessary, Doctor. I know the way." And she left the room. Lassiter turned to the man, eyebrows raised in surprise. The man stood and offered his hand over the desk, his handshake firm and brief. "Thank you, Doctor." He moved to the door and paused, turning back to offer what he apparently felt was an explanation for the woman's behavior. "He's her partner." *** ICU Room 6 Sunday, 1:31 AM She had encountered the usual resistance to her demands. No one was permitted to remain with a patient beyond the scheduled five minutes per hour. It would interfere with their ability to provide adequate care and was against hospital policy. She had listened with weary forbearance, just as she had to the doctor's discourse. They were just doing their jobs, she understood that. But they didn't understand what Mulder needed. He needed her. And she would be here for him, whatever it took to accomplish that. She rubbed her thumb over the back of his hand, curling her fingers against his cool palm. She usually preferred to hold the hand they'd placed the IV in, but the equipment was too close to the bed on that side to accommodate the chair they'd brought in for her. "You need to stop this." Scully squeezed his hand and watched his eyes. They were open, staring unblinkingly into whatever horror Modell had sent him to. "I know you, Mulder, and I know what you're trying to do. You think if he stays focused on you, he can't hurt anybody else." She touched his cheek, gently turning his face toward her. "But you can let go now. He's gone, can't you feel it? Please, Mulder. Look at me." Nothing. She reached up and pinched his earlobe. Hard. He should blink, try to pull away from the pain... "You know, this is becoming something of a bad habit. You going out and getting yourself hurt so I can sit here and develop an ulcer waiting for you to come back to me. And you wonder why I live on yogurt and salads, while you wolf down every greasy burger you can get your hands on." The mental image made her smile. "My digestion has taken too many hits, thanks to you. It's called heartburn for more reasons than the location of the pain, partner. I think you owe me a break this time." His hand was as rigid as the rest of his body. Holding onto himself so hard had to be exhausting. She began to massage his fingers, and unaccountably, her eyes began to fill with tears. "Mulder, I--" The words were there, all she had to do was say them. "You mean so much to me." Emotion choked her voice to a whisper. "I can't let you go." A sudden increase in the frequency of beeps from his heart monitor drew her attention and she sat bolt upright. "Mulder, I want you to relax. Right now." The beeps increased, the spikes on the display getting alarmingly close together. "Don't do this..." A nurse came quickly into the room and crossed to the other side of his bed. "What happened?" She had just begun to check his vitals when the beeps that counted his heart rate blended into one continuous squeal, setting off alarms on every monitor he was attached to. "Mulder!" Scully stood quickly and shoved the chair out of the way to make room for the crash cart. Scully moved to the foot of his bed, helpless to do more than watch as the fight for her partner's life was taken out of her hands. *** He actually missed the voice. Even the taunting words were preferable to this smothering silence. The voice was Modell's. He knew that, but it didn't matter. It had told him the truth. He could never make up for the hurt he'd caused everyone in his life, and it would keep on happening for as long as he lived. There was only one way to end it, and he was ready. And then everything had stopped. The voice that had shown him the light was gone and he was alone in the darkness. Without the guidance of the voice, he drifted. He could feel the doubt creeping back and fought to hold his place against it. By the time he felt the change in his surroundings, it was too late to stop it. The sound had been floating on the far edge of his awareness for some time, he realized. And there was light, too. Brief flashes that rapidly lengthened into a continuous, blinding glare, just as the sound resolved itself into a shrieking cacophony that thrummed along his nerve endings like a current. He made one desperate attempt to stay where he was, but it was hopeless. He was falling from some unimaginable height, arms flailing in the rush of air that drew him precipitously toward whatever awaited him... *** ICU Room 6 Sunday, 1:33 AM "Charging!" Lassiter had arrived in the midst of this current crisis and had quickly taken over. "Clear!" The paddles were applied for the third time to Mulder's chest, arching his back completely off the bed and dropping him back again. The frantic scream of the cardiac monitor abruptly stopped. For ten interminable seconds, Scully held her breath. All eyes were fixed on the monitor's display screen, watching the flat green line sail noiselessly across its face. Then a beep and a spike, followed by another and another. "We got him!" The activity changed from desperation to routine as the successful code run was completed. Scully stood at the end of Mulder's bed, gripping the footboard. Her attention was riveted on the cardiac monitor, willing his heart to maintain its rhythm. "Doctor, his eyes are closed." Scully's gaze flew to Mulder's face, then to Lassiter's for confirmation. He nodded, smiling broadly. "I wouldn't have recommended it as a treatment but I'd say the defib brought him out of it." He performed a quick exam, lifting Mulder's lids and shining his penlight in his eyes. He pinched Mulder's earlobe and smiled again when his patient flinched slightly. "He's back." *** Sunday, 7:25 AM Scully had called him with the news of Mulder's recovery and he'd finally been able to grab a few hours sleep. As he approached Mulder's room, Skinner donned his professional mask for the benefit of the nursing staff. He'd learned long ago that his imposing physical presence coupled with an official air produced the best results when his aim was to break a rule or two. He wanted to see how Mulder was doing before he went in to the office, and he was not inclined to wait for the scheduled visiting time. As it turned out, the staff was in the midst of a shift change and barely nodded in his direction as he strode to Mulder's door. The lights were dimmed, but he could easily make out Scully's sleeping form. Her head was resting on the bed next to Mulder, and she had his hand clasped in both of hers, just touching her face. He looked up at Mulder's face. A pair of hazel eyes blinked back at him, and he felt his jaw unclench into a broad smile. Mulder gave him a sleepy grin and made a shushing gesture with his free hand. Skinner walked quietly to the opposite side of the bed. "I'm fine, Sir." Mulder's whisper was roughened from his hours on the respirator. "What happened, Mulder?" The smile faded. "I don't know, Sir. I..." Scully raised her head at the sound of Mulder's raspy whisper and kissed his hand before she realized they weren't alone. Mulder's grin returned, but his eyes held a warmth that Skinner knew was meant for her alone. "We have company, Scully." Skinner couldn't recall ever seeing her blush before. "I just dropped by to see how Mulder was doing. I see you have things under control." He felt a huge smile tickling the corners of his mouth and headed for the door before it could blossom. "Could I have a word with you outside, Agent?" Scully rose quickly and followed him out into the hall. "How is he, Scully?" He was sorry to see that the blush was fading. It had made her look very young. "He'll be moving to a regular room as soon as one is ready. They plan to keep him the rest of today for observation and release him tonight." Her eyes drifted back toward the door and her voice grew soft. "He's going to be fine." For a moment he allowed his thoughts to roam past his self- imposed boundaries. What must it be like to share a relationship like theirs? He'd had good relationships with women in his life, but nothing like the one he had watched them create. It was inspiring and disheartening at the same time. He wondered if either of them realized what they had. He let his gaze follow hers to Mulder's door. "Take care of him, Dana." His voice, the softness of it, startled her and she turned quickly to meet his eyes. What she read in them made her throat ache with the tears she'd been holding back since Mulder disappeared. "I will, Sir. Thank you." It was all she could force out but she could see in his eyes that it was enough. And suddenly the moment was gone. His professional mask fell back into place and he squared his shoulders. "I'll expect to see you in my office at 8a.m. Monday." He turned on his heel and strode to the elevators without another word. She watched until the doors closed behind him but he never looked back. *** Fairfax Mercy Hospital Neuro ICU Sunday 7:40 p.m. He'd been so quiet on the way here that Scully was seriously reconsidering the wisdom of exposing him to Modell so soon. She parked the car in the Emergency lot and turned to face her partner. "Mulder, are you sure you want to do this?" She touched his arm when he didn't respond. His gaze swung slowly to meet hers. "I have to." His voice wasn't much above a whisper and his words were heavy with memories he wasn't able to share with her. Not yet. When they reached the ICU, she stopped to speak to Modell's nurse. "Go ahead, Mulder. He's in room 8. I'll be right there." "All right." He walked slowly, deliberately, toward Modell's room and Scully could read the tension in his posture. It took everything she had to let him go on alone. "Is something wrong?" Scully's attention was drawn back to the nurse just as Mulder made the turn into room 8. She closed her eyes for a moment, then turned to the nurse. "No. Everything is going to be all right." It was a prayer more than anything. "Did you have a question about the patient?" "No. I just needed to give my friend a little space." Scully smiled. "Thank you." When she reached Modell's room, Mulder was standing just inside the door. "There's no telling how long he'll hang on, but he'll never regain consciousness." Mulder's gaze never moved from the man in the bed. "You know, we thought he was undergoing treatment. We were wrong." "What do you mean?" He gestured toward the thick notebook clipped to the footboard of the bed. "Read his chart. The M.R.I's were a way to gauge how much life he had left, but he consistently refused treatment. The tumor remained operable right up until the end but he refused to have it removed." "Why?" "I think it was like you said. He was always such a ... little man. This was finally something that made him feel big." There was bitterness in his voice, and a sadness that she couldn't begin to fathom. Whatever Modell had done to him had nearly taken his life along with his sanity, and she knew there was much more that he hadn't found a way to tell her. "I say we don't let him take up another minute of our time." She reached between them and took his hand, squeezing his fingers briefly before letting go. *I'm here, Mulder. Whenever you're ready.* She turned and began walking down the hall, forcing herself to let him find his own way. She didn't breathe again until she felt him at her side. *** End