Title: Paradox By: Carrie-Leanne Category: UST, MSR (sort of) Story, Angst Summary: Mulder suffers a time travel accident which could change the course of the future for him and Scully. Will he mess things up or can he put them right? Rating: PG-13 Disclaimer: Can we assume for a moment that I've disclaimed? Okay so if you'd just like to go sue yourselves CC & co just to be sure there's no repercussions for me ;-) Spoilers: None except a blink and you miss it reference to Fire. It is set around mid/late season 7 so before things got complicated and er, well complicated. Anyway I don't worry about dates and timings and stuff, nobody else will notice if I screw up the timeline will they? ;-) Thanks To: All the usual suspects; Laine, eleanor (with a little e) and Grace for reading and feedback. To Stephanie for the stalking and nagging me to write more. And mostly to Liz for being my very first beta reader despite being a very busy bee. Particular thanks to Microsoft XP's wonderful "auto-random-delete- your-programmes" feature , without which I wouldn't have lost this entire story and had to retype from one very scrappy hardcopy. Therefore I might have got it posted about 6 months earlier when I actually wrote it. Authors Notes: At the end Please send feedback: Majikthize@hotmail.com XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX "Hereafter in a better world than this I shall desire more love and knowledge of you." ~William Shakespeare: As You Like It. PARADOX ------- Prologue (Tuesday 13th April 1982) --------------------------------- Mulder stood at the edge of the grassy quadrant, shadowed from the noonday sun by the building behind him. Hardly anyone crossing the square noticed the thoughtful stranger, who watched the ebb and flow of students going about their business. The place was alive, fresh and youthful, filled with people barely beginning the great journey of adulthood. Presently he spotted her. Not that he'd been looking for her, he told himself, but her bright hair was unmistakable and so familiar. Of course she was much younger now, even more than when he had first met her. He watched as she laughed lightly at a comment her walking companion made, and he felt a pang of regret that she should ever have cause to lose the simple, yet elegant, innocence of youth. A small wistful smile played on his lips as an idea took him. He knew it was a dumb thing to do, but it would be such a brief encounter and she wouldn't remember it. Almost without thinking he pushed himself away from the cool shade of the building to approach her, hurrying to catch up as her quick stride brought her to opposite edge. He had barely left the shadow of the building when a sharp crack resounded around the square. He felt something hit him in the chest, knocking him to the ground. Another crack, this time he recognised as a gunshot and another thud, higher this time, catching his throat. Sharp, blossoming pain spread out from his chest and neck, he stumbled onto his knees, bringing his hands to staunch the sudden flow of blood. Falling to his side, the world took on a dizzying angle. People were running everywhere, some running away, some cowering and crying, some even running towards him. Life oozed from him, and he panicked as he realised that he could no longer breathe. His senses suddenly became so much more acute. In the melee, he could hear individual voices, footsteps. Whiteness descended on him, as the sun glared in his eyes. A dark shadow crossed his vision, as a familiar face, his own face blocked out the sun. His eyes widened in shock as he saw his own self leaning over him. Suddenly, understanding came upon him, as he recognised his own actions, and the implications of them. He tried to speak, to reassure that he had done the right thing, but all that happened was a gurgle of blood spurting between fingers clutched at his shredded throat. The version of himself that leaned over him looked incredibly sad, and whispered, "I'm sorry." Before (After) (Saturday March 18th 2000) --------------------------------------- Saturday. A day of rest, for most normal human beings. For most people rest involved settling down and watching some sport (maybe playing a little if the person was inclined). Maybe a little therapeutic shopping, followed up by a relaxing evening socialising or just enjoying ones own company. Relaxing definitely did not include spending a whole day cooped up in a small cramped office arguing heatedly but good naturedly with a university professor. Unless of course you were Fox Mulder. Mulder had met Conlin through Scully. He had taught her physics at university. Some time ago they had a case that had needed some expertise in this area and thus Mulder was introduced to Jerry Conlin and it was the start of an unusual friendship. Conlin had been telling Mulder about an experiment with molecular transportation he wanted to try. Mulder, having nothing better to do with his Saturday afternoon, agreed to come and help document the experiments success or failure. "So what is it we're doing here?" he asked Conlin, fiddling with the camcorder he'd borrowed that morning from Frohike. Conlin looked up from the experiment. "Uh, well I, as you may know it is impossible to determine both the location and the speed of an electron in an atom at the same time. You either know one or the other. If you know the speed, you cannot determine its location in the atom." Mulder nodded, not really understanding as much as he made out. He wished Scully were there. She was the physicist, and understood these things far better than he. She'd also told him she had better things to do on a Saturday than sit in a dusty science lab at her old university. "Well, for my senior thesis, I suggested a theoretical experiment that, if we could figure out how to get it to work, we would be able to see both variables together. The experiment involved making the atom jump from one position to another rapidly. The observer would see it rapidly wobble between the two vacuums. The wobble would produce a reading that would fluctuate enough to read every variable about that atom." "Gee. That sounds exciting." Mulder said, deadpan as he flicked the camera on and began randomly filming around the room. "Hmm, well you don't have any appreciation of the finer arts of physics do you? Many scientists have theorised that if we knew both variables, a lot of the secrets about the way the universe actually worked would be unlocked. We might be able to harness that knowledge to create perpetual cheap renewable energy, to travel through space- time." "Ooh, beam me up, Scotty." Mulder quipped, and smiled sarcastically at the professor before growing serious again. "Okay, let's do it." Conlin began the experiment. Mulder zoomed his camcorder around the room playfully, giving the home movie a gritty reality feel, or so he told himself. "Hey, keep the camera on the important stuff, will ya?" Conlin called out from his position hunched over a computer display hooked up to the experiment. Nothing seemed to be happening. In fact nothing happened for a good fifteen minutes and Mulder grew bored and restless. Then something happened. "Uh, Mulder, could you just turn that dial there, up to eleven please, then let me know if the temperature changes." Mulder lowered the camera a fraction and reached for the dial. His fingers made contact with the smooth plastic. There was a jolt. He felt intense pain course through his fingers, up his arm and penetrate the length of his spine. The pain hit his head, exploded in white hot agony and he blacked out. Past Present ------------ When Mulder opened his eyes again, he got the distinct impression that something was very wrong. A sharp, stabbing pain shot though his head, and travelled through every nerve. He closed his eyes again quickly. Everything ached, his head worse than the rest. It took him a moment to realise he was lying on the cold, hard floor in professor Conlin's office. And it was dark. Well, not dark, but it certainly wasn't the bright, sunny, early afternoon that he remembered. He figured he must have lain there a while, and then wondered why nobody had come to his aid when he passed out. Come to think of it why had he passed out? He opened his eyes again tentatively, and the pain seemed to have lessened slightly. He groaned anyway for effect and began to hoist himself off the floor. "I was wondering when you'd come to." A familiar voice asked from behind him. "Jerry! What the hell happened?" Mulder struggled to sit up, and twisted to see Conlin seated on the couch. Something felt very odd about this but he couldn't figure out what. "Well, that's the question. I think this holds the answers." Conlin held up the camcorder Mulder must have dropped when he passed out. "Uh." Mulder pulled himself upright testing his head and was assuaged with an unpleasant wave of dizziness and nausea. He tentatively stood. "Last thing I remember is...actually I don't remember. What time is it?" Conlin stood and held the camcorder out to Mulder. "Perhaps the real question is: What date is it?" "Huh?" Then it struck Mulder what was so odd about this situation. It was Conlin. He had more hair. It wasn't as grey. He was younger! "Oh shit." Mulder cursed, as it dawned on him what might have happened. "Tell me this isn't what I think it is." Conlin shrugged and approached his desk, pulling out a bottle of whisky and a couple of small glasses. He poured them both a drink and motioned for Mulder to sit down. "I was working out in the lab, when I heard this almighty crash. I ran in and here you were. After I'd checked you were quite alive, and I wasn't in any danger, I spotted this thing in your hand. I fiddled with it for a bit and figured out what it was. I played the tape and then I went through your pockets and found out who you were and, I put two and two together and here we are." Mulder swallowed the whisky whole, grimacing at the burning it left in his throat, but grateful for the reinvigoration it brought to his aching limbs. "And where exactly is here?" He asked, as a sinking feeling crept over him. "April 12th, nineteen eighty two." Conlin offered matter of factly. Mulder stood in shock. "What? Nineteen eighty two? Oh shit!" "Yeah, I think you said that already." He stared wide eyed at Conlin. "How?" Conlin shrugged. Well, you know that experiment I was trying out?" He gestured to the camcorder. "Yeah?" "I theorised that, if we could produce this effect with a larger multi-molecular object, such as the human body, then we could use this to transport matter in both space and time." "Uh huh. No kidding." "Of course it was only theoretical. I had no idea it would actually work." Mulder shook his head and sighed as the shock of what was happening wore off. "Just my luck. I get stuck in a real life version of Quantum Leap." Conlin looked puzzled "No, a quantum leap is the jump that..." "Forget it Conlin. It's a TV show that hasn't even been made yet. Just...forget it." Conlin nodded. "Okay then." Mulder picked up the camcorder. "So now that we've had a chance to meet up eighteen years before we should have, nice to meet you, how about you get me back where I belong?" Conlin looked down and then shuffled his feet nervously, as he stared at them. "What?" Mulder asked, picking up on his discomfort. "Um, well it's just that, I don't really know how or what happened." Mulder shook his head not understanding. "So what, so you screwed up an experiment. Unscrew it." Conlin sighed. "It's not that easy." "Seemed easy enough to get me here." "But I don't know how I did it. It could take weeks for me to figure it out, years even." "What do you mean years? I have a life I'd like to get back to!" Mulder's voice rose a pitch in panic. Conlin just shook his head. "Well, let me put it another way. I never tried this experiment when I first theorised it, because I could never work out all the variables. I've been working on it on and off for years. By the looks of it, I probably wouldn't have figured it out before I tried it in the year two-thousand." "So you're saying I'm stuck here until then?" "No, not necessarily. Now that I know I can make it work, I'll be more determined to make it work sooner. You being here has given me the push I need to figure it out." Mulder nodded. The horrible sinking sensation he'd been feeling was wearing off a little. So he was stuck a few weeks, at worst that he'd get to laugh at early episodes of Fame. "But, and here's the interesting bit." Conlin broke into his thoughts. "How did we meet?" "You had a student, Dana Scully. She's my partner." Mulder answered not understanding the relevance. "Dana, yeah she's in my freshman class. Bright girl. But anyway, the point I'm making is, what year did we first meet?" "About eighteen months ago, October ninety-eight. Why?" Mulder was confused and rapidly losing the plot. "You see, this means that well before I even knew you, for instance now, I will have already tried it and made it work." Mulder nodded finally getting where this was leading "And if you had, you'd never have tried it with me there to witness it in two- thousand, and therefore won't have ever got me into this mess." "And then, you'd never have travelled back to this time to be able to tell me about it." "And therefore, you probably won't try it until two-thousand at all, so I'll still get sent back here." "And then I'll know that I can do it and try it and maybe make it work so I try it well before two-thousand..." "Jesus, it's enough to give you a headache!" "Yeah!" Conlin had an animated glint in his eye. Clearly, this was his idea of excitement. "Oh boy, am I gonna have a paper to write on this! Whatever else happens, you gotta look me up when you get back where you're from." Mulder smiled without humour. "Well maybe you could work on that a bit." "Huh? Oh yeah, oh, I don't even know...never mind." Mulder caught him and called him on it. "You don't know what? You don't know if you can do it do you?" Conlin grew serious. "...No. I don't even know how we got you here, but I promise you I'll try and figure it out." "Yeah, please do, because if I have to live through the Cabbage Patch Kids craze again, I'll have to shoot the little bastards." They worked late into the night. Mulder recounted all the details of the experiment, what had happened and when things had gone wrong. His excellent memory was able to recall minute details about the day and circumstances that led him to be here. They reviewed the camcorder tap and Conlin excitedly scribbled down all the details, occasionally stopping to do some complicated-looking calculations. Finally, in the small hours of the morning, Conlin yawned. "It's no use. I need to sleep on this. I am not going to get it overnight, although we've made some huge leaps." Mulder looked crestfallen and angry. "Well, I'll tell you what. I'll be at home when you've figured it out, so why don't you give me a call. "He flicked a business card onto the desk and started towards the door. "Umm, Mulder? One thing?" "Yeah?" "Two things, actually. Firstly, your cell phone? I don't think it will work." Mulder pulled out his phone and glanced at it. Sure enough, NO SERVICE sat glaring at him from the screen. "Aw, crap!" "And the second thing is home for you is not your home. Not yet, anyway." "Shit!" Mulder exclaimed realising Conlin was dead right. "I never thought of that." The real Fox Mulder in this time was actually somewhere in England at that moment, probably doing pleasant things with one of the many charming young English girls who seemed to take a shine to him back then. Mulder turned to Conlin. "Well...you got me into this." he shrugged. "What? Oh, no!" Conlin replied, shaking his head. "You can't stay with me! What am I supposed to tell my wife?" "Don't give me a load of bull Colin, you don't have..." Mulder said, but stopped himself, realising that the Conlin of eighty-two may well have been married. What if he'd gotten divorced, or she'd died? He didn't want to give away the past. Future. Whatever, he thought, rubbing his temples. "Look, Mulder, I think you should just lay low here, until we can work this out. I have a pull out couch in there," He pointed to the inner office. "And I can let you have some cash. This place is locked up at night but I have keys. Security doesn't come by here much anyway, and if they catch you, then call me and I'll cover for you. Mulder sighed and nodded. He didn't really have a lot of choice. Past Tense ---------- Mulder spent the next morning shopping for necessities. He was, for once, grateful that he'd been paranoid enough not to completely rely on electronic funds, and pulled out the seventy dollars he always kept in his wallet to get something to wear. If he was stuck here for a while, he might as well have clean clothes and a decent shave. By the time he got back to the university, it was noon. Students were starting to filter out of the buildings all over the campus, and make their way to meet their friends for lunch. Mulder decided it was too nice a day to sit in a stuffy office all morning, listening to Conlin droning on next door. Instead, he stood out in the shade of a building, watching the ebb and flow of youth before him. Then he spotted her. He told himself he hadn't been looking for her, that her bright copper gold locks caught the sun and singled her out, even amongst the thronging students. But he knew this wasn't exactly true. Ever since Conlin had thrown him that curve ball last night by telling him she was here, now, he'd been subconsciously looking out for her. She was walking with a companion, a dark haired girl who was talking animatedly to her. She tipped her head in her companion's direction laughing at something that had just been said. She didn't notice his gaze following her. Then she crossed ten feet in front of him and he saw her retreating from his view. He noticed her hair. Longer than she wore it in his time, she let the natural curls form and bounce around her shoulders. After getting over the initial shock of seeing her, so young and vibrant he began to wonder what she was like. He knew that the Scully he first met was a lot different from the serious woman she'd grown into. He felt a pang of regret that she'd had so much pain in her life to make her so serious. Fleetingly it occurred to Mulder that if Conlin couldn't get him back that would all change. Maybe it wouldn't be such a bad thing if he got stuck here. He could make a big difference to their lives; maybe he could make sure things turn out better than they had. He knew what was going to happen; he could use that knowledge in so many positive ways. Subconsciously he pushed himself away from the shade of the building and strode quickly towards her, not intending to catch up with her but hurrying to do just that anyway. "Dana Scully?" He called and held a breath. She stopped and turned to look at him. Her eyes still danced with mirth and she bore no hint of recognition. "Yes?" She asked. He walking companion touched her arm briefly reclaiming her attention before walking off. Mulder felt his mouth go dry. He hadn't planned this. What now? "Hi." He settled for and held out his hand. She took it tentatively. "Do I know you?" "No! Yes, actually. Well not yet but...it's complicated." "O-kay" She threw him a quirky smile as if to say 'okay I'll humour him'. "Oh, Fox Mulder." He offered at last. "Fox? That's a name?" He cringed, and she immediately apologised. "I'm sorry, not nice." He shrugged dismissively. She shot him another tentative smile that he found himself instantly warming to. "So?" She prompted. "So? Oh. So I'm a friend of Professor Conlin." "And...How is it you know who I am...?" "Hah. Well, I guess I don't." She raised an eyebrow at him in a so familiar gesture, and he immediately smiled in response. So the eighteen year old Dana Scully wasn't taking any of his crap either. Somehow, it was a reassuring thought. "How about I buy you lunch and I can explain." He offered. "How do I know you're not a mass murderer then?" "Well you'll just have to trust me." He replied. She studied his face for a moment before nodding slightly in agreement. They sat in the diner across the street. They had ordered and were eating in silence. Mulder intermittently studied her and nibbled his food disinterestedly. Every now and again, she looked up from her plate and caught his stare a fraction of a second before; he remembered his manners and averted his gaze. He couldn't help but compare this young creature with the woman he knew. While she was pretty, he decided she'd definitely got better looking as she'd got older. He preferred his Scully, crazy though it sounded to him. All this while, Dana Scully had been doing her fair share of studying him. There was something a little commanding about him. Some casual arrogance, some ease he seemed to have with himself, as if supremely confident. And he seemed just a little too familiar with her, as if he knew her somehow, and she was waiting for him to tell her how. "I'm sorry, have we met before?" He looked up from his plate. "No. Well, not yet, anyway." His eyes returned downwards. 'What was it about him?' She wondered. There was just something intriguing about him. She was fascinated, and wanted to know more. The silence stretched out as they finished their food and were served their drinks. "So." She said at last. "Cat got your tongue?" "Hmm? Oh, no. Just thinking." "About?" "I was thinking that...ah, never mind." "No, tell me. You bought me lunch and for that I'm giving you my undivided attention for at least another three minutes." She smiled at him. "Okay. I was thinking you're beautiful, and I've never had the guts to tell you that before." She spluttered over her drink. "I'm sorry." He instantly regretted causing her embarrassment. Why the hell had he said that? "No, no, that's ok. I just wasn't quite expecting that. Thank you." "You don't mince your words do you?" She asked. "No, I guess not." He allowed a smile to play over his lips. They shared an awkward moment of silence before she broke it with a question she'd been wondering about since she met him. "So you said you're a friend of Professor Conlin then?" "Yes." He replied and offered no more. Okay. Dana Scully was getting confused now. So a complete stranger, albeit a handsome and enigmatic stranger had offered to buy her lunch, so he could...what? Not talk to her? "Did he tell you how to find me?" She probed. "Huh? No. I just spotted you and thought we could talk." She was getting tired of this game he seemed to be playing. "Okay. I like a good mystery as much as anyone, but I'd like a straight answer please. How did you know who I was then?" He looked up again and laughed lightly. "Are you ready to hear this?" She smiled and nodded. "Well, you and I will know each other one day, and as I'm stuck here for a while, or possibly longer, I thought I might as well see what you were like when you were younger." "...Huh?" now she was totally lost. He sighed and decided to come clean. She probably wouldn't believe it anyway, but what's new? "Professor Conlin was conducting an experiment. Somehow, something went wrong, and I ended up eighteen years in the past." "...What?" "I've travelled through time." She actually laughed out loud at this. "Why did I expect anything different?" Mulder mumbled. "I'm sorry." She said as she wiped a tear from the corner of her eye. "I like you. You're weird." "Thank you...I think." He responded, not really sure what to make of her reaction. "So, seriously. How do you know me, and why have you just bought me lunch?" He shook his head. Not much point trying to explain. She wouldn't believe him. "It doesn't matter how I know you. And why I bought you lunch? Because...because I'd like to get to know you better." She looked at him for a moment, trying to gauge his reasoning. He seemed harmless enough, if a little odd. He wasn't conventionally attractive, but he had a nice smile and lovely soulful eyes. And dammit he had something about him she could not quite put her finger on, but she liked a lot. "Well that's nice, but right now, I have to get back to class." He nodded. "So can we have lunch again tomorrow?" "Are you buying?" She smiled. "Of course." "And?" "And?" "And we actually exchange more than three sentences this time." "Agreed." He smiled. She nodded and rose, leaving him to finish his coffee alone. Stranded --------- Conlin broke the bad news to Mulder on the third evening. "I've checked and rechecked it." Mulder strode the length of the office, unable to process what Conlin was telling him. "Then check again." He almost shouted. "Accept it, Agent Mulder. I can't get you back. I just simply don't have the technology." "Then get it." "The only people who have that kind of technology now is the Government, maybe, and that's just speculation." "Oh, it exists. You bet it does, and I'll find a way to get it for you." Conlin shook his head. "Mulder, even if you did, if you could, I simply don't know what bought you here. Something you touched, the clothes you were wearing, the chemicals in your shampoo, any one of these could have been a factor. Even if I had the power source readily available, there is absolutely no guarantee I'd even come close to making it work." "Aw, Conlin. I have a life. Not much of one, it's true, but it's one I'm very anxious to get back to." Conlin sighed. "Well, I think that's the point here Mulder. I think you have to accept that whatever life you had, is gone. You're stuck here, so you might as well make the most of it." Mulder stared in shock and sorrow. How the hell did he get into this mess? "Cheer up Mulder. The eighties aren't so bad. We're a pretty optimistic bunch." Mulder shot him a look. "Jerry, when you're stranded eighteen years from your life, in a living primary coloured and legwarmer clad hell, and all you've got to look forward to is TJ Hooker that, by the way, had only one redeeming factor and it wasn't William Shatner, then you can tell me to cheer the hell up." Conlin had the grace to look embarrassed. "Look Mulder, I'm sorry. Hell, you think I wanted this to happen? Just know I won't give up. If there is a way, I'll find it." Accepting The Present --------------------- Mulder woke and stretched out on the tiny couch in Conlin's office. He felt the bones in his back crack, as they clicked back out from their hunched position. He'd have to find an apartment and soon, he thought. After the initial shock of discovering he was most likely stranded in the nineteen eighties for good, (or at least another eight years when they turned into the nineties) he'd managed to settle into something approaching a routine. For the first three weeks, he'd been miserable. Conlin had tried and tried to find some way to replicate what had happened, but the simple truth was, that it was impossible to cram eighteen years of research and development into a short space of time. After a month, and much pressing from Mulder, Conlin admitted he might make a breakthrough in six or seven years. Mulder gave up. There wasn't much point. After being missing for seven years he'd have been declared dead anyway. He wondered if Scully was worried about him. Was she looking for him? Stupid. Of course she was looking for him. The real question was when would she give up and move on? Thoughts of Scully brought him back to the past/now/present day version. Whatever, he thought scratching his head. After his self enforced isolation period, Mulder had ventured out into the world again, only to bump into the first person he'd met, Dana Scully. "Oh, Hi. It's you again. I've seen you around, and I wondered what you were up to." Mulder smiled wryly. "Oh, just killing time, I guess." "Are you okay? You seem a little down." she frowned. "Yeah, I'm ok. I just have some stuff I have to deal with. Actually, I've dealt with it, I think." He smiled at her, and for the first time, decided that the nineteen eighties might not be so bad after all. "Say, you doing anything for lunch?" "Well, I've been waiting almost a month for you to ask again. I still have questions you know." He shrugged. "Well, I guess I owe you a few answers." He kept the lunch arrangement the following day. Despite his promise to tell her about himself he managed to evade telling her anything personal, while displaying an eerie familiarity with her which she found she was strangely at ease with. That evening, Mulder approached Conlin. "Uh, Jerry I've been giving this some thought." "Uh huh?" Conlin didn't look up from the papers he was marking. "I figure I'm stuck here right, so I need to earn some money and get a place to live, to make some sort of life." Conlin glanced up. "Now you're getting it." He shrugged. "Get a job. With your skills and intelligence, you're bound to find something." "Well, it's a little difficult when I don't officially exist. Or to be more accurate, do exist, but not quite here and now." Conlin stopped what he was doing and gave Mulder his full attention. "Good point." "So, what I was thinking is, you could help me out." Conlin nodded thoughtfully. "I'll see what I can do." Conlin managed to get him a part time job on the university staff as his assistant. This earnt him enough to feed himself, and he slept in the office on campus to save money. He decided that once he had managed to find an apartment, he'd set himself up as a private detective. Seemed like the thing he was most qualified to do. He battled with his conscience a little, and decided to invest a little money in some stocks and shares; some he knew would turn out good in the future. Well, if he was going to have to relive this whole thing, he was damn well going to do it in style. Then another problem presented itself. Dana Scully. He'd been here a while now, and had managed several more lunch dates with her. It was obvious to him that there was chemistry between them. Odd that he'd never really noticed it with his Scully. Well, if he was honest, he'd have noticed it with her, but the moment was never right for them. If he was truthful, he always harboured a small wish that one day, everything would be just right and they would...be together. With this Scully, things were different. She was different. She seemed warmer to his overtures. Not that he'd said and done anything more or less than he'd ever with Scully, but her responses were, well, he was pretty good at reading body language and she definitely had an available sign up just for him. He never realised she had a flirty side. Probably a good thing she never brought it out to play when they were working together or who knows what might have happened. The dilemma was this. He liked her, he really did. He found her very attractive, and there was no doubt she aroused him. But he wasn't sure if it was her, or the her she would become. He mentally kicked himself. She'd probably never become entirely that person now. He was stuck here which means that she would never meet him in her future, and that meant a lot of bad things were going to not happen to her. That had to be good, right? It also meant that, if he had any chance at all to be with her, it was now or never. What to do about it? One Saturday, he decided to take the bull by the horns. He arranged to borrow Conlin's car, and invited Dana for a leisurely drive up state, to some old childhood haunts of his. When Mulder strode out to the car, he was pleasantly surprised to find Dana already there, waiting out front of the university with a large picnic basket. "Yeah, I thought we could stop half way." She said, slightly unsure. Mulder lifted the lid and smelt roast chicken, amongst the other delicious aromas. "Mmmm. You made it all yourself?" "I had help from my sister and my mom." She admitted with a blush. "Oh, and did they know you were meeting a man for lunch?" "No. They think I'm meeting a boy, and you're definitely not a boy." Mulder paused, yep, that was a green light if ever he saw one. "Do I have to prove that later?" He quipped. She licked her lips and shot him a coy look. "Oh, only if you want to keep me in confessional material for a couple of years." Whoo boy! Well, one thing he'd learnt is that when Dana Scully wanted something, she damn well let you know. A sudden fear hit him that this might be moving a little too fast for him. "Scully I..." "Scully?! Aw, come on! I might be a navy brat but please!" He shook his head, "Sorry, Dana, Dana." "That's better. Now where are we going again?" Mulder gave her a sly wink. "Ah, that's a surprise." They drove up the coast for a few hours. A leisurely drive, taking in the scenery. Mulder pointed out a few spots here and there he'd visited, and offered some trivial information about the area. Dana was fascinated, particularly when he pointed to one spot and told her it was a UFO hot spot. "Aw, come on. You don't believe all that crap, do you?" Mulder shrugged. "Well, you know I like to keep an open mind. It might pay you to do the same." "I've been doing that all day." She smiled back to him. At two o'clock, they stopped to sample the picnic. They spread it out on a grassy verge, just off a secluded road. "Hmm, Mulder?" She mumbled around a half eaten sandwich. "Yeah?" He propped himself up from his reclined position on one elbow. "What's so bad about Fox that you don't like being called it?" He shrugged. "Try it on a ten year old and you'll soon find out." "Ah." She nodded understanding. "So does everyone call you Mulder?" "No, not everyone. My parents called me Fox." "Anyone else allowed the privilege?" "Hmm. No, except a few girlfriends and guys bigger than me." "Girlfriends?" "Yeah, you know. When a man and a woman like each other, they sort of..." "Ha ha. What I meant was have you had many?" "Well, not really, no. I tend to be choosy, or they do. I haven't figured out which way round it is yet." "Oh, I think it must be you who's the choosy one; I can't see many women turning you down." "Really? So, are you saying that, well, hypothetically speaking of course, say you wouldn't?" He winked at her. She raised any eyebrow. "Hypothetically speaking of course no, I wouldn't. Turn you down that is." She paused before adding with a wicked grin; "So long as you let me call you Fox." "No! Absolutely not!" He sat up laughing. "Pht! You're stubborn, aren't you?" He sighed. "It just sounds so wrong coming from you. You never call me Fox, ever." She shot him a curious look "See, there you go again. Alluding to knowing me." "I do know you." He stated matter of fact, biting into one of her sandwiches. "Really?" She observed him. "Have we met before? I think I'd remember knowing someone like you." Something about the way she said it made him look up to her face. There was a look of curiosity mingled with interest. "Well, you know, one day you will know me better than anyone." He whispered, leaning in to her. "Is that a promise?" She responded, not pulling away. "Yeah." He murmured as his lips descended towards hers. She closed her eyes and tilted her head up eager to meet his lips with her, but at the last minute he turned aside and placed a chaste kiss on her cheek. "But not yet." He whispered and she giggled in response. So they met again, and again and finally, he plucked up enough courage to invite her out on a proper date. Mulder stood out the front of the university, waiting for Dana to arrive. When she approached him, he was fiddling with something small. "What you doing?" "Oh! Nothing." He hurriedly pushed the object inside his jacket and stood up. "You look nice." He offered, as much to distract her than as a genuine compliment. "No, come on, I wanna see." She protested, and made a grab for his pocket. He made a playful bat at her hand but she'd already reached inside and grabbed it, pulling out his cell phone and studying it with awe. "What's this?" She asked. "It's a cell phone." He replied honestly. "A what?" "A portable phone." "It's not! It's too small. Where's the battery?" Mulder smiled. "Inside." He grabbed the phone back from her, and flipped the case open to reveal the tiny battery. "Wow! I had no idea they made these things this small!" "They don't. Or at least they won't for about another fifteen years at least." He responded. She shot him a look. "You're not gonna tell me you bought it from the future, are you? I thought we'd cured you of that little fantasy months ago." He smiled at the teasing she seemed to enjoy. "Yes, as a matter of fact I did." "Yeah, right, and I'm the next pope." She responded cynically. "Seriously though, where did you get one so small?" He just looked at her. She raised an eyebrow. "Well, you don't believe me and I'm not gonna lie to you." "Come on, Mulder." "Hey, we better go, or we'll miss the movie." He swiftly changed the subject. They went to see The Thing. Scully found the movie scary. Mulder's only comment was: "If I hadn't seen it a dozen times already, I would have been shocked and scared witless. In fact, I think I was, when I first saw it." "Talk about exaggerating!" "What?" "It only came out last week. There's no way you've seen it a dozen times." "It came out eighteen years ago, where I'm from. Mind you, it's still a classic." "Mulder cut the crap will you? This 'I'm From The Future' thing is getting a bit boring, you know." "But..." Mulder stopped himself, and shook his head. "I'm not even gonna argue with you. You don't believe me, and I know how stubborn you are." She sent him an odd look. "And how do you know that, I wonder?" "What?" "How is it you seem to know me so well? It's been driving me crazy, wondering about it." "Scully..." "And there you go again, using my surname. I wish you wouldn't do that!" "I'm sorry, but I...I guess I'll always think of you as just...Scully. Dana doesn't seem right." She thought about this for a moment. "Visitor from the future, huh?" she asked seriously. He nodded. "Okay, I'm seriously listening to you now. Prove it." He bit his lip before deciding how to proceed. "Okay. Firstly, look at this." He lifted out his cell phone and switched it on. Accessing the phone book and explaining to her what he was doing, he called up her name and showed her. "Okay." She responded. "All that proves is that you've got someone with the same name as me programmed into your phone. So are you saying if we call that number I could speak to myself?" He shook his head. "Not likely. The damn thing doesn't seem to work yet." She nodded. "So what else? Is that your proof?" "No." He pulled out his drivers' license and showed her that. She studied it with a raised eyebrow, "Date of birth: nineteen sixty one? Is this a joke?" "No, that is when I was born. I was twenty one in '82. I know I keep myself in shape, but even I'm fooling myself into thinking I could pass for a man in his twenties." "So, how old are you then, really?" She swiftly changed the subject. "I'm thirty eight. I'll be thirty nine in... Aw hell, how long have I been here?" "I first met you about three months ago." Mulder paused. Had he been here that long already? "Anyway, it's a fake." She stated flatly. "Huh?" "The licence." "Why? Why would I fake it? Why would I lie about this? What do I have to say to make you believe me?" "I don't. I won't. I can't believe that!" He grabbed her shoulders and spun her to face him. "When you finish university, you plan to be a doctor. Your sister Melissa is into all that new age crap. You have two brothers. One is in the Navy. Or at least will be. Your mom and dad live in Baltimore; he's a navy captain and adores you. He calls you Starbuck and you call him Ahab..." "Okay! All that proves is that you're one of those rare breeds on men that actually pay attention when a girl they want to sleep with is telling them all the boring stuff." "I don't want to sleep with you." He blurted out shocked. "Oh, no? Really? You buy me lunch several times, you take me on coastal picnics to childhood haunts and you treat me to the type of movie that's bound to get the girl crawling into your lap half way through. Well, forgive my dear cynical heart for thinking any different." She retorted, with a flash of the Scully that she could become. "No! Well, it's not like that." He spluttered. She quirked another eyebrow at him. "Oh, silly me, and I thought there was only one way of sleeping with someone." He laughed. "Dana, you have no idea do you?" "Well, perhaps it's time you gave me an idea." He looked at her defiant blue eyes, daring him to do what he most wanted. "I want you so much, it hurts." He replied, surprised by his own honesty. He held her gaze for a long moment and then leaned in and literally swept her up into his arms, crushing her mouth to his. After a long moment in an intense embrace, their kiss softened, and he allowed his tongue to part her rapidly softening lips. She groaned, and he pulled away, burying his head into her hair. A sudden pang of conscience hit him. She was eighteen years old and barely an adult. What he wanted he wanted for life. What he wanted was his Scully. He pulled away sharply. "I can't do this. I'm sorry. I can't." He gave her a look of sadness and regret, and strode away, leaving Dana confused and hurt. He threw himself on the couch in the office. This was crazy. She wants this, he told himself. Yeah, but she wouldn't if you hadn't made her want it, he told himself. He closed his eyes. What to do. He knew what his body was telling him to do, but his heart was tortured. Sure he wanted her, but he wanted her to be his Scully, not this young, carefree spirit on the cusp of adulthood. For all her youth and promise, he wanted the older, wiser, and yes, more cynical woman he'd come to love over the years. Love, he acknowledged miserably, that would most likely never be consummated now. As he battled inner demons, a subtle noise interrupted his thoughts. He opened his eyes to see Dana, standing there uncertain, the moonlight throwing patterns across her through the slats in the blind. "I just wanted to make sure everything was ok." She asked tentatively. "Yeah. You should go." He answered his throat inexplicably tight. "No, actually I think I should stay. I need to know what's going on here." He sat up and cocked his head to her. She approached and knelt at his feet. He sighed. Honesty was the only way. He cupped her head with his hands. "Dana you have to understand I-I don't...I'm not in this for some carefree love affair. I'm taking this seriously. And that isn't fair on you." She shook her head, her eyes open and confused. "Why? What makes you think I don't want something more permanent?" He pulled his hands away and raked them through his hair. "Hah! Because you're what? Eighteen?" "What, so it's an age thing, is it? Well, it doesn't bother me. I mean, it really doesn't. I don't care how many years difference there are between us. I want this." He shook his head. "No, it's not an age thing, not strictly, it's just that there...There is-was, someone I...I cared for very deeply, and I guess I'm afraid I'm substituting you for her. Well, actually, I know I am which if you understood at all is really screwed up." Dana absorbed this in silence, and then eventually spoke. "So this person. Someone you loved a lot?" "Ye-es, you could apply that term." "What happened? Did she hurt you?" He shook his head. "No." "I don't understand." She added, not understanding. "She's gone." He intoned sadly. "She's gone for good now and, and that's my fault too." He sat back slouched against the cushions and closed his eyes, realising his last few months here must have changed their fate irrevocably. Dana raised herself to sit next to him, and took his hand in hers. "I am very sorry that you lost some one you loved. But if she really is gone for good, why shouldn't you find some happiness? You know the human race strives and strives to be happy and fulfilled, and here you are having it virtually flung at you, and you don't want it?" He turned to catch her gaze with his, but said nothing. "You're not a martyr; you don't have to live in misery." He shook his head and swallowed a lump that had formed in his throat. "I've been living in misery for so long, I'm not sure I know how to do anything else." "Then let me show you." She offered quietly. He closed his eyes and fought the guilt that threatened. He was not going to ruin her life, he was not. But when he opened them she sat there with her blue gaze scrutinising him with innocent curiosity, and his resolve crumbled. Softly, he lowered his mouth to hers... Lousy Timing ------------ They lay there in the darkened office. Mulder seated one leg across the seat of the couch and one dangling on the floor. Dana lay between his legs, her head cradled against his chest and one hand toying with his chest hair. She shivered slightly and Mulder pulled the blanket off the back of the couch over her. "Better?" He asked softly. "Mmm, yeah." She mumbled drowsily. They lay in comfortable silence, neither willing to speak for fear of that in doing so they might destroy the mood. After a while, Mulder shifted slightly, his leg growing numb where she lay on it. She sat up and looked at him. "Mulder?" "Yes?" "What happens now?" "Hm? Oh, you'll grow into a beautiful, talented woman and incredibly successful at anything you decide to do, and I..." He stopped himself. What would he do? Suddenly the idea of being a private detective didn't seem too appealing. "Oh, I'll make myself useful somehow." She teased him. "Well I think I've got a pretty good use for you right now." "Now?" He asked. "Dana Katherine Scully are you insatiable?" "No, just never had a man do that to me before." Mulder started. Did she mean...? Surely not! "Umm Dana, when you said you never had a man who could, erm, what exactly..." Dana giggled and twisted her head to look at him. "Oh not like that, I meant, just, I've never enjoyed it quite as much before." "Oh, Oh, right." Mulder replied, realising what she actually meant. "Really?" He asked, incredulous. "Yeah, really." She replied and dropped a light kiss to his chest. "Hmm, I thought you Catholics didn't believe in sex before marriage." "Well, I told you once before, it gives me something to confess over." They laughed at this. "So, seriously Mulder. What now?" Mulder thought about this a while. "I don't know. I didn't really have a plan beyond this moment." "Yeah," She added. "Who knows what the future might hold, eh?" He had to agree with that. Dana had to leave early in the morning, but she departed promising to come back that evening. Mulder watched her go and felt wonderful. He had to travel eighteen years into the past to get laid for the first time in years, which seemed strangely ironic. He felt slightly guilty for considering what had passed between them last night as something as banal as getting laid -- he knew it was so much more, even if he hated to admit it to himself. Feeling energetic, he decided to go for a run. That was something else he hadn't felt much like doing in a long time, but today he felt like running a marathon. Funny how one form of physical activity can prompt another, he thought, as he made his way, sweat soaked and breathing hard, back to the lab. He pushed open the door and Conlin was there. Four extremely meaty looking men in black were also there and two of them had weapons... "Hey!" Mulder cried. "Friends of yours Conlin?" "I'm sorry. I don't know how they found out." Conlin cried, as they men hustled them both out the door towards a black van. Out of breath and exhausted from his run, Mulder's struggles were no match. They were both thrown into in to the van. "What the hell is going on, Jerry?" Mulder asked once they were moving. "I don't know. They took me from home this morning. They kept asking where you were and where my work was. Then they made me come to the lab, and then they rifled through all my belongings, took my notes, and then you came back and now here we are." "Who are they?" "I don't know. Government, I think." "You think?" "Yeah. I've been asking around about some stuff. About trying to get you back where you belong. Maybe I asked the wrong person. What do you think they're gonna do to us?" Mulder stared grimly at him and shook his head. Pulling Back ------------ After he was thrown in a featureless grey room, nobody came to see or speak to him for two days. At first, Mulder called frantically through the door. Once the initial shock of being abducted by these government henchmen had worn off, the panic and realisation that Dana would be wondering where he had gone, finally set in. She had no way of knowing what had happened to him, or where he was. Their relationship was at a critical stage. He desperately wanted to be with her again and he knew that she'd be wondering where he was. Maybe even thinking he was running scared. He neither saw nor heard from Conlin in this time. He had one visit, a brief entourage of yet more henchmen, who came to give him some blankets to sleep on, some food to eat and a bucket which he assumed was supposed to be to be his toilet. Well, that's what he used it for anyway. To hell with them if it was supposed to be for anything else. Then, late into the third day, someone came. The door to his cell opened. "Hey!" He called out, his voice hoarse from first shouting, and then misuse. They didn't speak but hauled him to his feet and pushed him down the corridor. He reached a room and was pushed inside. One of the henchmen motioned to a chair one side of a table. Mulder dropped into the seat and glanced around. The room was as bare and grey as the one he'd been in, with the exception of two chairs and a table in between them. It looked like the hundreds of police interrogation rooms he'd seen over the years. To his left was a large mirror that was clearly a one-way window. He raised a hand and waved with a cheerily, ironic smile as whoever was on the other side. The henchmen took up positions around the room and tried to act nonchalant. The door to the room opened again and a well dressed man in his forties entered and sat, wrinkling his nose at the smell from Mulder. Three days without a wash and in sweat soaked jogging clothes, made him smell a little ripe. Mulder shrugged. "You don't like how I smell, you shouldn't have abducted me, you son of a bitch." He stood and made a grab for the man, but was forced back into his seat by two of the henchmen. "Ow, call off the gorillas, will ya?" "I will, when I'm quite certain you'll do as required." "What's that supposed to mean?" "Mr. Mulder, I'm offering you a chance to go home." "What?" "I know all about you, about where, or rather, when you come from. Now, a weaker man than I would probably torture you to gain vital future information, and use that to further his own need. I, however, am more interested in the technology that bought you here." Mulder shook his head. "Well you've got the wrong man. I'm just an innocent caught up in this." "No, you're the guinea pig that's been experimented on." "What do you mean?" Mulder asked, his mouth going dry. "Oh, you don't think your being here is entirely accidental do you? Professor Conlin planned for you to be transported all along. He just never bargained on it being eighteen years back. He planned on it being mere seconds." "How can you know this?" "He told us. You see, when someone plays around with the types of experiments he was conducting, it doesn't go unnoticed. We've been monitoring him for years. His work was always so promising. Anyway, we saw you arrive. We've been watching and waiting to see if he could figure out what he'd done and send you back. Unfortunately, he needed some help there." "Which is where you come in?" "Which is where we come in." Mulder sighed and sat back against the chair. "So what do you want with me?" "Ah, well, we've given Conlin the incentive and equipment he needs to reproduce the effects of the future experiment, and we need a test subject. Seeing as how you don't actually belong here, you seem like the most obvious choice, wouldn't you say?" Mulder absorbed all this. "What if I say no?" "Then I'll kill you." The man replied calmly. Mulder realised he had no choice. Either stay and die, or maybe have the chance to return to the life he'd left behind. His thoughts instantly turned to Dana Scully. How the hell was he going to feel around her now? Would she remember their past liaison? Would things even be remotely the same, or had he changed them irrevocably? "Okay. If I agree to do this, I have one request and a question." "Alright. I'm a reasonable man. Your request?" Mulder pulled at his sweater. "Some clean clothes and a bath." The man nodded. "Agreed. And the question?" "When I return to my own time, will I...will everything be the same as it was when I left?" The man barked quickly. "How the hell should I know? I'm not a damn physicist." Future Imperfect ---------------- Mulder woke up with a familiar, all-over ache. He dully remembered a bad dream about being stuck in the eighties, but then he sat up with a start, as he recalled it was no dream at all. "Ow!" He exclaimed, as his head connected with the underside of something hard. He forced his eyes open, and at first thought, he was blind, then realised it was actually pitch black. He groaned and began to haul himself up, groping at the object he was lying under, which turned out to be a bed with a thin mattress on top. He dragged himself up to sit on the bed and tried to absorb what had happened. They'd sent him back to his own time. It was all over. But where the hell was he? Had they sent him back? Maybe it hadn't worked. After a while his eyes adjusted to the dark, and he recognised the familiar grey cell he'd been held in before. He stood on shaky legs. "Hey! Anyone there?" He called through the door and thumped on it. All it did was make the pain reverberate around his head some more, and he collapsed back to lie on the mattress. Hours later, he had a visitor. Jerry Conlin. The Jerry Conlin from his time. Mulder smiled widely, pleased to see the older version of his friend. Conlin offered a tight smile, and Mulder instantly knew all was not right. "Don't tell me it's 2023 and I've come too far into the future." He asked, half-joking. Conlin shook his head. "No, it's June nineteenth two-thousand. You're almost spot on, back where you belong, give or take a month." Mulder nodded. "Then why am I still in a cell?" Conlin sighed and tried to figure out how to approach a difficult subject. "Mulder, when you first came to me in nineteen eighty two, I knew straight away what had happened. When I told you I didn't think there was a way to send you back, I truly believed that. And I encouraged you to make a life for yourself." "And I was doing quite well with that, before this." Mulder gestured around the barren room. "Yeah, well what I didn't consider was that your actions would change the future and we would never meet in the present as it now is." "We must have, or else I wouldn't be here, and you wouldn't know who I am." "I know who you are because I met you in eighty-two. You say we first met in ninety-eight, but in this reality, we never met then." Mulder shook his head. "I don't understand. Why? How? What am I still doing here?" "We never met because of two reasons. The first was because after they sent you back here I...I went to work for them." "Willingly?" Conlin nodded ruefully. "Eventually, yeah." Mulder swallowed. "And the other reason?" "Because you died in ninety three." "What?" Mulder exclaimed shocked. Conlin shrugged. "You were killed in action, so to speak. Some arsonist who was trying to take out an English MP, for some God- knows-what reason. They only caught him after he succeeded, and managed to take you and your partner out too. "I remember the case, but he didn't succeed. We...we caught him. Are you saying in this reality he killed us? Scully and me?" "Scully?" "My partner, your ex-student, Dana Scully. Are you saying she's dead?" His voice cracked over the words he could hardly bear to utter. Conlin shook his head in confusion. "Scully. She is, was, my partner?" He was growing frantic. To have travelled eighteen years back to the present to discover he'd lost her for good would be more than he could cope with. "No. It was another male agent. I can find out the name for you if it helps?" Mulder sent him a soulful look, finally seeing a glimmer of hope. "She never joined the FBI?" "I don't know but I can find out what happened to her too." Conlin was true to his word and after three days, in which Mulder underwent a battery of tests, came back with news of Scully. "Well, it seems Dana Scully never did join the FBI. She became a doctor, and is currently working in emergency medicine, right here in DC." "Married?" Conlin shot him a curious look. "Yeah, to another doctor. They have two kids, girl and a boy." "And a house with a white picket fence and a dog." Mulder's jaw tightened at the thought of her leading a happy, normal life without him. "Something like that." Conlin replied and paused awkwardly. "Look Mulder, don't think I don't know what was going on back there." Mulder looked aghast. He thought they'd been fairly discreet. Conlin held up the video camera, and Mulder remembered how one afternoon, he'd set it up and filmed Dana and himself joking around, so he could show her how the technology worked. "Ah." He licked his suddenly dry lips. "And honestly, Mulder, I don't blame you one bit. After all, you thought you were there for life. Hell, I even encouraged you to make a life for yourself. If anyone is to blame for this, it's me." "No, there's no need for blame. She's happy by the sounds of it, which is a hell of a lot more than she is, or would have been, working with me." "No, that's not what I mean. I mean, it's obvious that the reason her life turned out different was because you changed her fate somehow, back then. And because of that, your future fate changed, and you died when you should have lived." Mulder sat on the mattress again, trying to take it all in. He'd changed Scully's fate so she lived a normal life, but in the process, he'd sentenced himself to death. Seemed like a reasonable trade, seeing as how a normal life was all she ever wanted, and he didn't have much of any kind of life before, anyway. So she had literally saved him. He always suspected her level headed influence had grounded him but this was something else. But now he was back again, but she was...she was unobtainable. He felt a pang of regret. He had to see her, just to see her happy, just to know that this was right. Mulder stood, resting a heavy hand on Conlin's shoulder. "So when do I get out of here?" Conlin stood staring at him with sadness. "Mulder, did you not hear what I just told you? In this reality, you've been dead seven years." "And?" Conlin glanced round and stepped closer, whispering, "And if there is one thing I've learnt about these guys, it's that they don't piss around. Once you've served your purpose, you think they're gonna give you fifty dollars, pat you on the back and send you on your way? You might as well consider your ass officially disappeared." Mulder was silent. "Then I guess you gotta help me get out of here." "No, what I got to do is send you back, so you can change things back to the way they were. Then you can return here and still be alive now." "No. No, I'm not going to correct a mistake, just so I can be alive. If I died, then it was meant to be. Now that I'm here, I'll find a way of not being and disappearing my own ass." "Mulder, you..." "Conlin, no arguments. I'm not going back to mess up the past again. The past is set and the future is what it is. I won't change it. You just help me get out of here." Conlin looked stern. "You have no idea the trouble you're inviting." "Yeah, well, neither did you, if you managed to cause this chaos in the first place, by experimenting on me when I had no idea or choice in the matter." He rose to his full height and grabbed Conlin's shirt-front threateningly. Conlin backed off scared. "Okay, okay. I had a plan anyway. With a little alteration, we can get you out of here." Mulder and Conlin made their escape at midnight the following night. It was easy, with Conlin by now being a respected and trusted member of their team. He had almost unlimited access. Thus he was able to just march Mulder straight out the front gate with a scant excuse and no questions asked. Once outside Mulder turned to Conlin. "Jerry thanks. I want you to go back now; you don't need to run with me." "Hah yeah I do. I go back and I've got a helluva lot of explaining to do with why I let you get away. Lets face it my ass is toast." Mulder shook his head. "But they need you for their experiments don't they?" "Oh they'll find a replacement soon enough, the technology isn't so hard to grasp these days. Actually they could control the whole thing if it wasn't..." Mulder turned to him and questioned him with his eyes. "If it wasn't for what?" Conlin smiled. "I have one little secret that they don't know." "So you keep a trick up your sleeve to ensure you're kept firmly in their payroll?" "Yeah, wouldn't you if being fired was as literal as it sounds?" Mulder shrugged. "Yeah I guess." Conlin paused then added. "Mulder I'm going to let you in on the secret just in case, you know, anything happens and you need to use it." Conlin pushed a small folded piece of paper into Mulder's pocket. "I've set the coordinates back up to the past. I was hoping I could talk you round and persuade you to go back and put things right." Mulder glanced down then met Conlin's eyes. "Jerry I'm not going back. This is right." "Well take it anyway, you never know. Oh I have some other stuff for you. He opened his car and reached in the back as Mulder stepped into the drivers' seat. "Here." Mulder opened the small paper bag to find his camcorder, his badge and his weapon. "I snuck them out ages ago." Conlin added dismissively. Mulder contemplated them for a moment before slipping the gun and badge into his jacket pocket. The camcorder he switched on and rewound a short way. The screen filled with the image of eighteen year old Dana Scully's laughing face. He remembered the day he'd shown her the camera and how it worked and smiled wistfully before shutting it off and slipping it too into his pocket. They drove for an hour. Mulder seemed to be heading in circles at first, not specifically going anywhere. There was a long period of silence in the car before he asked. "Which hospital?" "Huh?" "Which hospital does she work at?" "Dana Scully?" Conlin asked immediately clued in to what Mulder wanted. Mulder nodded. "Uh, Mulder I don't think this is a good idea..." "Which hospital Jerry." He said more forcefully. Conlin sighed. "Georgetown Memorial. You're going to see her aren't you?" Mulder merely nodded. "Are you nuts? Once they know what's going on that's the first place they'll look. You don't think they didn't review that tape; that they don't know about your past." Mulder winced at the use of the word 'past'. To him it was still the now. "I have to know she's happy. I, I'm essentially giving up my life here and I need to know that it really is the right thing to do." They arrived outside the hospital; Mulder pulled the car sharply and haphazardly into a space and practically ran into the ER leaving Conlin to catch up. He didn't see her at first. A quick scan of the on-duty roster on the wall picked out a Doctor Scully on duty until 8am. His mouth quirked into a semi smile amused that she chose to use her maiden name for professional purposes. He approached the admittance desk and asked the woman behind it. "Excuse me I'm looking for Dr Scully. Is she available? It's very important that I speak with her." The woman looked up from her book. "Uh, yeah sure there she is right now." She pointed to a spot just behind Mulder and he turned and saw her. Dr Dana Scully looked up from the charts in her hand straight into the eyes of Fox Mulder. His breath caught in his throat. She wore her hair longer and in natural curls, pulled back from her face. Her figure was rounder and less toned than the Scully he knew but it was unmistakably her. He smiled at her as her face registered shock and recognition. Why wouldn't she recognise him, he hadn't aged a day since they last met. Wasting no time he approached her quickly, taking her by the elbow he guided her along the corridor. "I don't have much time." He mumbled. "Oh my God!" She exclaimed as she allowed herself to be led along with him. He pulled her into a quiet side corridor and placed a hand on both shoulders. "Oh my God, you, you look...where? What happened?" All the questions tumbled out at once then she surprised him by pulling him into a fierce hug. "Hey." He pulled away gently but kept his arms loosely around her shoulders. She shook her head, moisture forming in her eyes now. "You, you were gone, you just vanished and now look at you." Her voice cracked slightly. "I know, I know. I, I had no choice." She shook her head, clearing the sudden emotion away. "You haven't aged a day." He smiled down at her. "Yeah well you know all that from the future thing I did that pissed you off so much? Well turns out I really am from the future." He shrugged and let her absorb this. She was still so shocked by his presence in her life that she barely acknowledged what he said. "Mulder, I, I don't know what to say? What are you doing here?" Mulder glanced down the corridor. Conlin was pacing up and down nervously, glancing about for signs of trouble. "Listen Scully, I don't have much time, I just wanted to make sure that, to know that you're ok, that you're happy. You are aren't you?" For a moment she didn't answer and he was filled with a dread that he'd made a terrible mistake. Then she shrugged and agreed. "Yeah I guess I'm fairly happy. Why? What's this all about?" Before Mulder could reply Colin called out. "Mulder we've got to go. Come on." He began to run. Mulder hesitated for just a second, squeezing Scully's hand and bending to place a light kiss on her forehead. There was a loud gunshot. Both jumped and Mulder looked up to see Conlin fall, blood oozing from his chest. He pulled out his own weapon and tightened his grip on Scully's hand, desperately afraid he'd put her in danger. Scully eyed his weapon with terror as he pulled on her hand and dragged him down the corridor and out of the fire exit. Conlin was right it had been a stupid idea coming here. They rounded the building, Scully stumbling afraid being dragged along with him. "Where's your car?" He called out to her. "Uh, over there." She pointed to a blue sedan. "Keys!" And she fished them out and threw them to him. A shot whizzed over their heads. No time to send her back in, he unlocked the car and threw her in the passenger seat, stumbling round to the drivers side before roaring off. They drove for maybe forty minutes, heading out and away from D.C. before he turned to her and saw the terror in her eyes. She glanced up at him. "What do you want with me?" Shit! It never occurred to him that she'd be scared of him, that she'd be afraid of the gun. He forgot this Scully barely ever had any contact with anything like this. Feeling some explanation in order he pulled out his badge from his pocket. She flinched as it landed in her lap but opened it to see he was an F.B.I agent. "Oh." She exclaimed visibly relaxing. "Why didn't you say?" "What between the bullets and the men killing my friend? Gosh why didn't I think of that?" She blew air from her lips and turned to the window suitably chastised. "I'm sorry." He said. "I've had a very bad week, or eighteen years or something. I think I'm time lagged." He smirked and she managed a small grin in response. "What the hell is going on?" She asked suddenly angry now the danger seemed to have passed. "If I tried to explain you'd never believe me so just go with it." "No!" She exclaimed. "You disappeared out of my life for eighteen years and now you just show up out of the blue. Turns out you're FBI and people are trying to kill you for God knows what reason and I'm dragged along for the ride? That's not an explanation and I want one." He sighed. Trust Scully to demand the facts. Good to know some things haven't changed. He swerved the car into a motel car park and found a secluded spot away from the road. "Ok what do you want to know?" He asked, trying to work out how he was going to say this. "Firstly I want to know your secret to anti aging." She quipped with a flash of humour. He laughed. "Yeah ah, well I told you. I told you then and I'm telling you now, not that you'll believe anyway. I'm a time traveller." She snorted and shook her head. "I must be having a bad day or something." So he recounted the story from the beginning. How they had known each other in his future/present, how he'd got stuck in the past, believing he could never return to his present. Just when he thought he could make a life he was ripped away from it and sent back here. To a future that wasn't quite his own future. He told her that he was dead in this future. "See I think this is how it's supposed to be." He said. "You would have saved my life somewhere in my original timeline but because I altered your future by being in your past you didn't save me. But it doesn't matter because I'm here now. It's crazy I know but I think this is somehow right." "How can your dying possibly be right?" She asked. "I'm not dead; I've just been away for a while. I, don't know I can't explain it but. Look in my original reality you were, well you and I, we, neither of us had the best of lives. We both made sacrifices. In this life, there's no sacrifice to be made. That's got to be right." "What about those men after you? They want you to sacrifice your life?" He shrugged. "I'll find a way round them." She shook her head. "How?" "What how did this all happen? Conlin was..." He paused remembering thee life draining from his friend's chest. She picked up on his discomfort. "It wasn't your fault." "Yeah it was. It was my plan to escape he wanted me to, to go back." "Why didn't you?" He looked at her. "Because I couldn't do that to you." A long moment of silence spread out between them. His earnest eyes catching in the low moonlight. Eventually she placed her hand over his and squeezed. "You know I'm glad you came back. I missed you when you were gone." "Yeah?" He asked. "Yeah, I don't know if you noticed but I was getting pretty serious about you there. It, it was hard when you just disappeared off. Actually I thought you'd run scared of my feelings and I was angry at you. But then anger isn't a good emotion and, well I wasn't angry, I was just aching for you." He looked up surprised at her candidness. Her feelings shone for her eyes and it was clear to him then that if he kissed her now she wouldn't pull away." "So, you're married I hear?" He asked, changing the subject. "Yeah." Spell broken. "Franks a wonderful man. We have two kids. Stephanie who's five and Josh who'll be three next week." "What are they like?" He asked aching and yet proud. She pulled her wallet out and showed him pictures. Frank, her husband was a strong handsome looking man with blonde hair and a firm jaw. The little girl had sweet red curls like her mother and was clearly going to grow up to be the spitting image of her. The boy also had a shock of red curls and a cheeky smile. "They're beautiful." He whispered. "They're my babies." She added obviously proud of her family. Mulder swallowed the jealous lump in his throat and reminded himself once again that this was right." Well you know I think it's time I let you get back you get back to them. It's almost four am." He started to get out the car but she stopped him with a light touch. "What about you?" He paused. "I'll head South and lay low for a while. I'll get by I always have." "Well the least I can do is help you somehow. Why don't you take the car? I'll report it stolen in a few weeks." "How will you get home?" "I'll take a cab." "No, I'll drive you first." Mulder and Scully drove back to her residence in almost silence. It seemed once the awkwardness of meeting up again had passed and the explanations aired that they had no need for verbal communication. For a brief moment Mulder thought it felt just like any number of road trips they'd been on together. Then he was reminded that this would be the last ever road trip he'd take with her. As they drew into her road he killed the engine and the lights. "What?" Scully asked looking up from the semi hypnotic state she'd been in. "Look." She followed the path of his gaze and saw a black sedan parked outside her house. Clearly visible inside to anyone paying attention were two men. "And there." He glanced over to their left and she saw another man strolling casually as if going for a walk at five in the morning in a sleepy suburban neighbourhood was entirely natural. "If we go round the back..." she started but he shook his head. "They'll have that covered. Shit!" She bit her lip and asked the question that she feared the most. "Mulder they, you don't think they would hurt my family would they?" He looked at her and rubbed her arm reassuringly. "I doubt it; they wouldn't want to create more attention than they have already. But if you go back in there...Damn! They'd probably take you hostage. They know how much you, you mean to me." "Mulder that's my family I have to go back." "I know. I'm thinking." Mulder glanced in the mirror "Shit!" New problem. A black sedan pulled quietly into the road behind them. They had to get out of there now. "Is there any other way out of here?" "Yes. Up ahead and turn left then left then third right. It'll take you back up to the interstate. But if we take off in the car won't they follow. "Not if I lose them first. Hold on. He pulled away quickly, not bothering to turn on the lights and sped up the road. Both cars were taken by complete surprise and he would have got away with it except a third car came round the corner just as he was turning. He swerved and clipped the kerb but kept going. Unfortunately this lost him valuable seconds and the pursuit was on. Mulder didn't mess about. He knew the roads around D.C fairly well and steered them round a convoluted course to loose them as quickly as possible in the side streets. But still they kept up. A series of loud rapports alerted him to the fact they were now shooting at them Scully gripped the handrail tightly. "Give me your gun." She cried out as he threw them round another corner. "What?" he barely spared her a glance, concentrating on the road. "Give me your gun. They're shooting at us, let's shoot back. Maybe I can take out their tyres." Scully that only happens in the movies, don't be stupid." She grabbed his gun out his jacket pocket and wound the window down anyway. She leaned out trying to aim at them but found it difficult through the twists and turns they were taking to lose their pursuers. Mulder took a sharp swerve to the right and she almost dropped it out the window. "Scully get back in." He called sparing her a look. Another round of bangs as bullets impacted on the side of the vehicle and ran up the side doors. Another two inches and he'd have been hit. Scully regains composure enough and squeezed of a couple of shots, handling the weapon like a pro, much to Mulder's surprise. "What you think I haven't used a gun before." She shot at him. He had no chance to reply. He spotted a turn he knew would lose them and made a sharp right. More return fire hitting their side and Scully cried out as they were flung hard against their seats. He turned again and again. The gunfire missed, then grew fainter as he finally shook them off. "Yes!" He cried out when they didn't take the next two turns after him. "Scully I think we lost 'em." He glanced at her then and for the first time saw the blood. His heart leap in shock. "Shit!" He swerved into an alley and pulled up out of sight of the road and turned his attention to her. She'd been hit. Blood soaked into her white lab coat from a wound near her shoulder. He pressed his hand to it desperate to staunch the flow. She opened her eyes and tried to speak. "Hit." She croaked out; blood spurting from between her lips. Uh oh that wasn't a good sign was it? "Yeah help me out here you're the doctor." "No help." She managed to wheeze, He checked their surroundings. He had to get her out of there. Get her to a hospital. A black sedan cruised by at the top of the alley but mercifully didn't see them. "Yes help, come on; stay with me here. Tell me what to do." He began to panic. He was loosing her dammit; he wasn't going to let that happen. "Scully come on." He ran a hand round her back to feel for an exit wound but there wasn't one. With a sickening lurch he realised the bullet had probably hit a bone and reflected back into her chest, probably taking out her lung in the process. "Jesus no!" He cried in desperation. He pushed his hand harder against her wound as if mere pressure alone could heal her. His other hand rose to her neck caressing her face and subconsciously feeling her pulse thready in her neck. Her eyes closed in pain and blood slipping between her lips again. He swiped it away with his hand. He was loosing her and there wasn't a damn thing he could do about it. "Scully no!" He pleaded again; pulling her body to his as her breath grew more and more shallow until it was no more. Mulder held her. He held her and felt the rage and anger at the injustice of it all well up inside him. She didn't deserve this. She'd been happy, she should have lived. He hated them for killing her. He hated them for killing Conlin. He hated Conlin for getting him into this and mostly he hated himself for being so damn stupid and selfish for wanting to see here again despite the risks. He uttered a sound that was half way between a sob and a laugh. Why oh why could not a future version of himself have come back and warned him not to go to Conlin's stupid lab on that fateful Saturday in the first place. Then it struck him. He knew a way to get back. Hell Conlin had even set the co-ordinates and given him the secret to making it work. He could go anywhere he wanted. Any when. Back to, oh say the Friday before this all started and stop himself. But how? How would he convince himself he was who he said he was? He looked down at his clothes, tainted with Scully's blood. He reached into his pocket and felt the paper Conlin had given him. He unfolded the neat little square and read it's quickly. He almost laughed. It was a sequence of keystrokes and a simple password. Anyone could have figured it out given time. Rising with renewed hope he ran. Breaking into the base was even easier than getting out. So easy in fact he wondered why they bothered having guards on the gate. He spared scant remorse on the guard he killed to get in and whose automatic weapon he took to kill anyone who got in his way. He figured it didn't matter in the end because when he fixed this mess they'd all be alive again. He caused enough panic chaos and mayhem to create a diversion and get to the lab. Once inside he barricaded the doors. It wouldn't hold them for long but he only needed a moment and it wouldn't matter. He'd be gone. Fixing The Past (13th April 1982) --------------------------------- By now, Mulder was used to the sensation. He arrived back in the past in Conlin's office with very little fanfare. Once he'd woken up and the stabbing pain in his limbs has subsided, the first thing he noticed was that, yet again, he wasn't at the exact time he'd first arrived back. For one thing, it was the middle of the day. He could hear sounds of bustling students filling the corridors and milling around the grounds. He exited the office to discover an empty lab. The clock above Conlin's desk showed that lunch had just started. He searched with his eyes, and discovered a newspaper lying in the waste paper basket by the desk. Pulling it out, he glanced at the date. Tuesday 13th April 1982. Lunchtime. Shit! In about five minutes, he would be too late to stop himself from bumping into Scully. He raced out the lab, through the corridors, and out into the back area of the campus, where there were no students congregated. As he was rounding the building, he was just in time to see Scully exit another building on the opposite side. He ducked into a doorway, thinking fast, and scanning the crowds to find himself, panicking when he couldn't spot him. Then, suddenly, he caught sight of himself. How odd. How odd it was to see yourself, and to know what you're about to do will change the course of history so drastically. Too late, he thought. The other version of him had already spotted her, and begun to push himself away from the wall to approach her. Mulder thought fast. Damnit, he was too late! There was no way he'd reach him before he reached Scully. And then, even if he did, he'd cause such a fuss, that something was bound to change. Thoughts fleeted through his head that, maybe this first meeting would be okay, that it would make no difference, but he knew that it wasn't true. He knew this was the moment. He had to stop himself. But how? As he watched himself approaching her, time seemed to slow down, as realisation dawned. There really was only one way to stop this, and that was to stop it permanently. Conlin said he shouldn't be alive in the altered timeline, so it seemed ironic that now, the only way he could hope to restore the original timeline, was to kill any hope of it ever existing. He had to eliminate this Mulder who was about to make a huge mistake. And the only way he could do that now was to literally eliminate him. But this was him. The him that was here now, only a few months ago. If he killed that Mulder logic dictates that he too would cease to exist. Another thought was that it almost didn't matter anymore. He glanced down at his hands and clothes, sullied with the blood of that vibrant young woman, striding purposefully across campus. Whatever the cost he had to make sure that he was not able to corrupt her life. Damnit, she deserved better than the life she'd had with him, and the death he'd brought upon her. Trying not to think about what he was doing and it's consequences for him, he drew his gun, racking the slide as he aimed it at the other version of him. Finding his target with the ease of a practiced assassin, he closed his eyes briefly, steadied his aim, and fired. It wasn't a clean shot. Not a kill shot anyway, so he aimed and fired again, and again, the third shot taking out his victim's throat. He stood staring for a moment, wondering why he was still here, oblivious to the panicked screams and stampede of students around him and his victim. His gaze flickered briefly to where Scully had been walking, and he noticed, with satisfaction, that her companion and her where nowhere in sight, having fled the square at the sound of the first shot. A lump formed in his throat as he realised what he must now do. He swiftly approached his victim and dropped into a crouch beside him. Pretending to be administering first aid, he rummaged through his pockets, removing his ID and weapon. She must never know him in any way. Briefly, his gaze caught his own dying eyes, and he paused, swallowing the sadness, and feeling remorse for his actions he whispered, "I'm sorry." not sure who he was sorry for. Himself or...himself. The dying version of himself looked up with realisation and understanding, making him feel even worse for the sacrifice he'd forced himself to take. Without another word he sped off, running as fast as he could, away from his victim and the university, trying to find somewhere to go, where he could await his fate. He didn't get far before he felt the strength leave him. Collapsing breathlessly in a back alley, a mile from the scene of the crime, he leaned heavily against a wall before sliding to the floor, as his legs gave way. Dizziness overcame him and his vision span. His mind was cursed with perfect clarity. He shouldn't be here. He had no right to exist in this time or this universe. He felt a sudden constriction about his chest, as he realised he couldn't breathe. In a moment he mercifully blacked out. An audible pop sounded in the abandoned back alley, as air rushed to fill the vacuum that used to be Fox Mulder. Epilogue (Monday 20th March 2000: 7.47am) ----------------------------------------- "Morning." Scully said chirpily, as she came through the office door, slightly surprised to find Mulder there that early, although not half as surprised as Mulder was to find himself there at all. He didn't answer or look up from the object in his hand. She couldn't quite see what it was, because the only light in the room was coming from their sole, dusty and narrow window. She flipped on the light and approached. "What's that for?" She asked nodding to the camcorder he'd placed on the desk. "Huh?" He looked up, finally noticing her. "Morning. Good weekend?" He asked, not answering her question as usual. "Yes, thank you. I spent the weekend at my mother's; my brother and his family were visiting." Mulder smiled, finally paying her the full attention she deserved. "Nice." His slight grimace held what he really thought of spending a weekend with her brother. "My brother Charles, not Bill. I don't think you've ever met him, have you?" "No, but then again, if he's at all like Bill, I think I'd like to keep it that way." Scully suppressed a smile. She knew there wasn't much love lost between her brother Bill and Mulder, but sometimes, she thought they were so alike. Bullish, pigheaded, far too macho for their own good, and both thought they had her best interests at heart when they really didn't have a clue. "So, how was your weekend then?" She asked, changing the subject. "Weird, actually." "Well, yes I know that. You don't do normal, Mulder." "No, I mean weirder than usual. I woke up this morning after a really freakishly realistic dream. At least I assume it was a dream, because if it was real, it was really weird, and it changes a whole load of things." He paused, realising he was rambling slightly. "And anyway, I realised I actually can't remember what I did this weekend. I have no memory of anything since Saturday morning." Scully looked concerned and perched on the edge of his desk, touching his chin and tilting his head to the light, to check him over in a doctorly fashion. "What do you remember from Saturday morning then?" He endured her examination with scant patience. "Well, I vaguely recall talking to Frohike. I guess that must have happened, because this is his camcorder." He pointed to the object on the desk. "Are you sure they didn't drug you while you were there?" "It's entirely plausible with those guys, you know." He paused and stood, brushing her hand away in mild annoyance at her attempt to doctor him. Her unneeded hands dropped to her side. "What was the dream about?" He turned to her and gave her a wry smile. "Ah, well, that is a very good question. But I really don't think it's something I'm entirely comfortable talking to you about." "Definitely drugs. Mulder, maybe we should get you to a hospital to get you checked out." He waved a hand at her. "No, I feel fine. I have a mother of a headache and a strange sense of foreboding, but I get that at least five times a week, so everything is normal. Anyway, I'm sure the guys wouldn't have subjected me to anything dangerous. Well, Frohike and Langly might, but Byers wouldn't have let them." "Right. And why would they put you in danger, when you do such a great job of it yourself?" Mulder shot her a look. "Only because you do such a great job of saving my ass." "Yeah, just think. I could've been a great doctor and here am I; my sole purpose in life is to save your butt at all too frequent intervals." She grinned impishly. So it was going to be like that today, he thought. He liked it when Scully was feeling a little playful, and for some reason, today he felt particularly grateful for her being here with him. Probably the after-effects of whatever oddities he got up to that weekend. Plus, that lucid dream he'd had, which was screwing up his head. If it had been a dream after all. It couldn't have been real; it seemed too much like a piece of bad fiction to have really happened. And there were certain some erotic elements to it, which were not unheard of in his dreams. It already seemed vague, as if he was looking at it through a veil. That in itself was strange; he usually remembered his dreams very clearly. He had a strange feeling that someone was inside his head, trying to erase his memories, and that, that someone was himself. A thin sliver of the memory/dream filtered back to his consciousness and left him wondering. He had to ask, had to know. "Hey Scully, did anything really weird or mysterious ever happen to you? I mean, before this?" He shrugged, and gestured to their office in general. Scully looked up thoughtfully from the paperwork she was beginning to shuffle on her desk. "Not really, not weird." "When you were in college or university? Nothing odd?" "Well, now you mention it, yeah, there was a really strange homicide at my university, not so much weird as unexplained." "What happened?" Mulder asked, his mouth dry as recognised the event. "There was this guy and he was shot on campus. He wasn't an employee or student there, and nobody knew who he was. As far as I know, they never found out, and they never found out who killed him or why. I remember it was *the* talking point for months. I never knew if they ever found out. It was all sort of hushed up, wasn't very good for their public image." Mulder nodded, trying to grasp at the threads of the dream, even more convinced that it wasn't a dream. "What if I told you I knew all about that, that I..." He shook his head. The memory was fading more and more by the second. "I knew that already. I was there. Or at least I thought I was there, but now that you tell it, I'm wondering if I'm not just pre-remembering it all." "Like deja-vu?" She suggested. "Well, it's entirely possible I've told you about it before. Actually, I always thought of that as being the one moment when I started to show an interest in pathology, I always wondered about that man. How? Why? Who? The whole mystery of it just hooked me in. In all these years, I'm sure we must have had that conversation somewhere along the way." He nodded. It made sense in reality, but it also made sense in that uneasy part of his mind that wondered whether it was all real. A sudden thought occurred to him, and he nearly laughed it was so obvious. Of course it was real. If it hadn't happened she wouldn't be here right now. He had to be there to make sure she was here to save him. The whole dammed thing was preordained from the start. Either God had a terrible sense of humour, or this was one hell of a screwed-up paradox. Pity he couldn't remember most of it. Except the good stuff. He thought carefully for a moment before uttering his next words. "Scully what would you say if I said I think I was actually there? That it was me?" She looked at him like he'd finally gone mad. "I'd say I'm calling Frohike to find out exactly what they gave you." He paused, wondering if he should tell her more, if he should reveal his suspicions. He glanced down at the camcorder. Maybe that held proof. His mouth went dry as his considered the evidence that it might contain. Did he really want to know? He gradually became aware that she was talking to him again. "...But if you really want to figure out what you did this weekend then I'm sure there's something right there on your desk to jog your memory." Odd that her words should echo his own thoughts. Did he want to know? "Lets plug it in and see, but I warn you if it's ninety minutes of the inside of a lap dance club, I'm probably going to find something less tacky to feast my eyes on." She grumbled good humouredly. Mulder stared at the camcorder considering his options. Then he came to a decision, opened the camcorder extracted the tape. Grabbing a pencil he wound it under the tape and unthreaded it from the casing. "Mulder!" Scully cried, genuinely shocked at his actions. When he'd finished mutilating the tape beyond repair, his looked up from the pile of black ribbon in front of him and grinned sheepishly. "Why?" Scully asked. He shrugged and gestured to the useless heap. "Maybe the consequences of knowing this particular truth outweigh the need to know." She gave him a last curious look and buried her head back into her work. ------- THE END ------- Authors Notes and other boring stuff: Thank you for reading. Hope you enjoyed it and if you did (or didn't) please let me know. Actually please specially if you hated it, I went on a "Dealing With Feedback Constructively" course recently and need to practice my new found skills;-). Majikthize@hotmail.com Not sure about how I wrote young Scully. What do you think she was like at 18? By the way, for all the little smutmeisters out there I did actually write the love scene but didn't put it in because I'm evil and like to tease you. If you want it I am happy to send to anyone over the appropriate age. Believe me when I assure you that this is not some underhand tactic to entice you to email me. Oh no I wouldn't stoop so low; the story just worked better without the smut so it was a totally creative decision, honestly. ;-)