My version of the standard disclaimer is to bow profoundly in Chris Carter's direction. He thought these characters up, Ten Thirteen owns them, and FOX does something with them (but I'm not sure of the legalities). I'm borrowing Mr. Carter's characters and am trying to keep them as true to his vision as I can. Of course, he doesn't want them to be romantically involved, but I'm just going to ignore that little temporary aberrance for the time being. He'll come to his senses eventually. :) Please don't distribute this without my permission (I'll probably give it if you ask and say pretty please with sugar and whipped cream and a cherry on top). And, as every other author does, I'm looking for comments -- good and bad -- about the story and whether you want to know what happens before and next (say next because that's what I've got). On with the snow...I mean show. BLIZZARD part 1 by L.C. Brown (LCBX5ME@aol.com) The snow was falling faster now, thicker every minute. Glancing up briefly, hoping for a glimpse of sky, all Scully got was another faceful of surprisingly weighty snowflakes that clung to her eyelashes and stung her cheeks. She pulled the fur-lined hood of her parka a little closer around her face. In Aspen, this weather would be great. But this wasn't Aspen. Her boots weren't high enough and with every step she could feel the snow packing around the top where her jeans were tucked down into the fur lining. These boots were supposed to be weatherproof, but she had a feeling they hadn't been made for this type of extreme condition. "You want to play the Your Fault game, Mulder?" she asked, deceptively calm, plowing doggedly on through the knee-deep snow. "If it'll make you feel better, sure," came the immediate response from the tall man beside her. "I'll even let you go first." "Oh, good." She knew there was an edge to her voice and didn't care. "It's your fault, Mulder, because you're the one who accepted this stupid Bigfoot assignment in the back of freezing nowhere. Assistant Director Skinner said we didn't have to go if we didn't want to." Mulder shook his head. "It's your fault for missing the first plane. We'd have been holed up at the ranger station three hours ago if it wasn't for that." Scully hoped he couldn't hear her teeth grating together over the racket they were making as they crunched and crashed through the deepening snow and drifts. "It's your fault," she said finally, "for picking the rental car that broke down." She couldn't see his face inside the hood of the navy blue parka he was wearing, but his voice sounded tart when he answered her after a moment's pause. "Well, it's your fault for suggesting that I keep trying to restart the damn rental car when it quit." "I told you I could hear something wrong in the engine and if you had listened to me in the first place...." "Hey, stick to the game," he protested, putting out a hand to keep her upright as she stumbled into a deeper drift. "Sorry," Scully apologized somewhat breathlessly. The footing was getting increasingly unstable here, and she was so tired now that it was hard to keep moving without staggering. "Okay, then, it's your fault for opening the hood when I told you not to. I told you there was smoke coming from the engine and you didn't believe me." Mulder took a deep breath of the frigid air and puffed it out again in a chilly cloud. "It's your fault for not letting me put the engine fire out. If I had, at least we'd have had the car to shelter in, even if the motor didn't run." "It's your fault for wanting to walk the rest of the way to the ranger station. We could have stayed with the burned out car." "You didn't have to agree to come," Mulder pointed out, then stopped as Scully's next step took her hip-deep into a hidden hole. Watching her flailing arms as she struggled to free herself, he schooled his face to lose even the hint of a grin before he stepped around in front of her to help. She looked up into his face suspiciously before finally reaching up a mittened hand. He obligingly hoisted her out, holding onto her for a minute so she could get her feet under her again while he looked around, trying to get his bearings on where they were. With his arm around her, steadying her, he could feel her trembling with fatigue. He was tired, too, but it was clear that Scully couldn't go on much further. There were no landmarks. The woods were quiet except for the insidious whisper of the snow as it continued to fall. An occasional breeze swirled the snow into eddies and lifted the heavy evergreen branches in a gentle wave. Scully sighed finally. "You know something? I think it's my fault for not ditching the FBI recruiter and becoming a wealthy and respected plastic surgeon to the stars." Letting her go, Mulder rubbed an impatient hand across his eyes to clear the snow from his brows and lashes, turning slowly around in a full circle to survey the area. "It's actually my fault for joining the Bureau to profile serial killers instead of becoming a serial killer. I'd probably have gotten more respect." "No doubt," Scully said dryly. "But you're right. It is your fault." He shot a quick look at her, then grinned and shrugged. "Whatever. Anyway, I don't think we're on the main road anymore." Scully nodded. "I think we've been off it for ten minutes or so. The snow feels different here, not as well packed or something. Maybe this is a logging road we're on now." "And you didn't want to say anything?" "No point. You wouldn't have believed me anyway. Ten minutes ago you were still too mad about the car to listen to anything I had to say." His silence was tacit acceptance of her reasoning. "Mulder, how far was it to the ranger station from where we broke down?" "A little less than three miles, according to the map." "Well, I think we've covered nearly a mile, and we've taken our sweet time about doing it. This snow is getting worse." "I know," he nodded. "And we're off the main road now. Ergo, we're not going to make it to the ranger station." They both turned around and looked at the tracks where they'd blundered through the snow and then both looked up at where the sky should have been. The ceiling was low and heavy with snow, and the sun was going down fast. Under the trees it was already twilight. "Should we try making it back to the car?" Scully wondered out loud when the silence had gone on too long. "It'll be too dark to see before we get halfway back," Mulder told her truthfully. It wouldn't help to point out that Scully would never make it that far with the snow getting deeper all the time. She already knew it. "I think it would be safer to stay here for the night and work our way back to the car in the morning." Scully didn't bother suggesting that he go back without her and direct help to her from there when it came. She didn't believe in wasting her breath. While Mulder cut evergreen branches with his utility knife, she walked a wide circle around the area he'd chosen for their shelter, noting its physical features automatically while she tried once more to find a way to get her cellular phone signal out of the dead air pocket of these mountains. "Still no luck with the phone," she reported at last, coming back to the large, low-branched evergreen beside which Mulder was piling cut boughs. "And the wind's changing, I think." Her partner didn't say anything, just shifted the pile of boughs to a different location beside the tree, where they'd be sheltered from the wind if it picked up during the night. Scully ducked under the low branches, snow powdering down on the hood and shoulders of her white parka as she brushed against the laden branches, and reached out a hand for an evergreen bough. Mulder was too tall to stand up inside the branches of the tree so, with him passing branches in to her, she did her best to construct their shelter, keeping it as small as possible for heat conservation, weaving cut branches vertically with live branches to form a windbreak and what might loosely pass for a roof. "It'll keep the snow out for the most part," she said as she crawled out some time later, shaking clinging needles off her mittens, "but my Girl Scout leader would not be impressed." "Neither would mine," agreed Mulder, on his hands and knees as he scooped and shoved and packed down snow over the base of their construct to strengthen and insulate it. "Good thing they'll never know." "You afraid of losing your survival skills badge?" "No. My Homemaking pin." Scully smiled faintly and bent to look inside the opening of the shelter. "We're going to need more branch ends for flooring in there, something between us and the snow to minimize heat conduction." Straightening, she watched Mulder take out his knife again and look ruefully at the blade in the near darkness. "It's never going to be the same again. These branches are as tough as old roots." "I'll get you a new one," she promised. "You gave me this one last Christmas," Mulder reminded her, crunching off into the trees to begin hacking at branches. "So this time I'll think ahead and give you a machete. Or would you prefer a sword - the samurai kind, maybe, like that Highlander guy on television?" "No, thanks. Too big to carry easily." Scully smiled. "Well, you could keep it wherever he keeps it," she suggested. "I don't think so," he grimaced over his shoulder at her. "I figure that carrying a concealed sword around is the reason he can't have kids." By the time Mulder was back with an armful of branch tips, she'd put their backpacks safely inside the shelter, up against the trunk of the tree to make a headrest. She'd also packed down the snow floor as much as possible, and was satisfied when the addition of the branch ends softened the hardness of the floor and hoped the new resin-scented additions would keep their body heat from being leeched away into the ground. The problem was that the shelter was almost invisible from the outside. The only indications of their presence was the trampled snow and the scars on the trees where low branches had been stripped away. Search and Rescue wouldn't be able to make it up here until tomorrow, though, she reasoned. Time enough to worry about making themselves more visible tomorrow. Right now her legs were shaking so badly that she could hardly stand up. It was dark enough now that she barely saw Mulder's old-world gesture at the shelter. "Ladies first." "It's going to be tight quarters in there, Mulder," she warned, easing herself inside. "I'm counting on it." "What?" came her muffled question. Mulder shouldered his way carefully through the doorway and stretched out full length beside her on the bed of evergreen branches, careful not to disturb the construction of the sides or roof. "I said I'm counting on it being tight quarters to keep warm. I don't think we'll freeze to death tonight, but the temperature may drop tomorrow if the storm doesn't blow itself out tonight. Do you have room to sit up?" "I think so," Scully said, suiting action to the words. "Can you prop those branches outside over the doorway? We need to keep out as much weather as possible." Scully maneuvered her way past him as he made himself as small as he could. The entrance effectively protected, she made her way back and eased herself down beside him again. The darkness inside the shelter was almost tangible now. "So, Mulder, did you bring any food?" "Sunflower seeds?" he offered. "Not food," she said decisively. "I brought trail mix, raisins, a couple of apples and a candy bar...." "Chocolate, Scully?" He raised his eyebrows. "Is that for medicinal purposes?" She ignored him. "And I brought a bottle of Evian." "Anything else?" "A peanut butter sandwich." "What, no caviar?" "All right, Mulder, what did you bring?" "A banana, a box of raisins, and a bottle of water. How come all the food, Scully? You packed like you knew this was going to happen." He couldn't see her at all in the dark, but he could feel the briefest hesitation before she answered. "Mulder, when I go into the forest with you, I've learned to prepare for the worst." Her voice sounded deliberately light. "So what now?" "You hungry?" Not really, just cold and tired." "Me, too. Then we'll wait to savor that sandwich until tomorrow. In the meantime, unzip your parka. I want to feel the zipper mechanism." Scully heard the twin sound of her zipper descending and in a moment she felt Mulder's hands at her parka opening and heard his satisfied grunt. "Compatible?" she ventured. "Yeah. Let's get our arms out of the sleeves. Then get closer and hold still a minute." Scully obediently performed the necessary contortions in the restricted space to free herself from the parka, leaned toward him, then held still while Mulder zipped their parkas together. When he was finished, he drew her hood well up around her face, pulled her close to him, and relaxed with a sigh, his arms around her. "Okay?" he asked. "Yeah, I think so." "You should feel better soon. Right now, it's like holding onto a popsicle," he complained, but his voice was smiling. "I know. I'm frozen." A shiver ran through her as some of the snow packed in the top of one of her boots melted in an icy trickle down her ankle. "But you're warm," she commented in some surprise, hugging him a little tighter in an appreciative embrace. "Feels nice." Mulder frowned into the darkness, his hands absently moving up and down her back, trying to rub some warmth back into her. She shouldn't be this cold. "Scully, what are you wearing under your sweater?" he asked finally after a few minutes. "Hmm?" She sounded half asleep. "Um...a flannel shirt, a T-shirt, and a bra. Why?" "And no pantyhose or long underwear under your jeans?" "No. Why?" "Because I think you're losing too much body heat. You brought plenty of food but you didn't wear enough layers. You should be okay tonight with me, but tomorrow...." He hesitated. "Yes?" she prompted sleepily after a moment when he didn't go on. "Tomorrow we'll work something out," he promised, holding her a little closer when he felt her shiver again. They'd have to get out of here tomorrow, he thought grimly. Scully wasn't standing up to the cold well, and without a thermal shirt next to her skin to wick away the perspiration from their trek through the snow, she had undoubtedly taken a chill. How much more snow were they going to get tonight? he wondered. His hands tightened unconsciously against her back and she turned her head slightly, pillowing her cheek against his shoulder. "You okay, Mulder?" she murmured, automatically checking to make sure he was all right. "Yeah, Scully, I'm fine," he said quietly, reassuring her. "Feeling warmer?" "Mmmhmm." He smiled at the lie. "Go on to sleep." He spent a few minutes silently reviewing their options - and there weren't many - until he was sure that she was asleep. Shifting his weight to a more comfortable position evoked no response from her, so his hands moved down her back to her hips and pulled her even closer into a more intimate embrace, letting her natural, unconscious motion complete the movement by pushing her leg easily between his. Their closeness was both comfortable and uncomfortable for him, Mulder realized wryly, and his hold on her relaxed a little as she burrowed her face into his throat in her sleep, still seeking more warmth. In the past he had deliberately tried to avoid thinking of Scully in a sexual way, not wanting to wreck their friendship, their partnership, with sex. He hadn't always succeeded in keeping his mind away from the physical, he had to concede, uneasily remembering a dream or two he'd had, but he had kept working at it. At the moment, though, he was too tired and too cold to be stirred by anyone or anything. But he had to admit privately that she felt very good in his arms, lying so closely. She sighed against his throat, her hold on him tightening briefly before she relaxed once more. This time the movement of his hands as they stroked her back was less warming than it was caressing, comforting. After a moment, her breath came evenly again and he let his hands rest against the small of her back. With her body so close to his, he was reminded anew of how small his partner was. He could almost enfold her and make her disappear in his arms, he thought, but when they were working he rarely noticed her size. Her competent, professional, unemotional demeanor encouraged one to forget her size and sex. He wondered sometimes about what price a woman like Scully had to pay in order to be taken seriously as a federal agent, the equal of any male agent. He wondered sometimes if the price was too high. He had firsthand experience of the strength in her that he had relied on, trusted in, and sometimes taken for granted during their partnership. Scully worked hard to be a partner to him, in every way an equal. He knew that she didn't want him to have to feel that she needed to be protected. He agreed that she could definitely take care of herself, didn't need his help; he didn't have to worry about her more than any other agent. And although he had been there for her a few times, he always felt that his support had been somehow lacking. But he had the feeling that because she was a woman working in what was essentially a man's world, she would never let herself appear more vulnerable than she could help. She wanted some kind of control of whatever situation she was in and always wanted complete control of herself and her emotions. He knew she hated being vulnerable in front of him or any other man. And yet she'd supported him so many times that he'd lost count. She just didn't want his support in return. He felt like Scully was always giving and he was always taking. Didn't want his support, he wondered sleepily, or was afraid of it? Was she afraid of what would happen if she dropped her guard? Afraid of what would happen professionally - or personally? He smiled to himself in the dark and rested his cheek against the top of her head, inhaling the scent of her. Scully would have some pretty sharp remarks to make if she knew the direction of his thoughts. Still, he wanted to be able to give more to her, and not just physical support - that was always easy for a man to give - but a more difficult kind of support. Something she would be willing to accept. Maybe more verbal...? Mulder shrugged mentally and closed his eyes. He didn't have the answers to the question of his relationship with Scully. He wasn't even sure there was a question. He was more concerned with what to do about their situation in the morning, and whether she would be able to make it out of here with him. He was tired and tomorrow's problems were all too close. Sleep would help. He hoped. *** Scully woke once in the night, like rising out of deep water, not sure where she was, her mind cobwebbed and confused. It was too dark to see anything, but she knew that the scent in her nostrils, the even breathing near her ear, and the arms around her were Mulder's. She didn't know why these things were, had only a dim feeling of being cold now, but she knew Mulder was there holding her. She was content to let the waters close over her head again. *** When she woke again it was with a start out of a half-remembered dream. "Scully?" Mulder's voice in her ear was husky with sleep. "Scully, what is it?" "Nothing. Just a dream," she murmured after a moment, the memory of their problem seeping back into her mind slowly. Just for a second she didn't want to move from where she was. She knew the necessity of their sleeping so intimately close, but she felt a secret, guilty pleasure at the weight and warmth of his body against hers, even with so many layers between them. She didn't want to lift her head from where it was tucked under his chin, her face buried warmly against his neck.... These were dangerous thoughts, she told herself sternly, opening her eyes and turning her face away from him resolutely. Nothing would be gained by dwelling on them. She had already decided that, hadn't she? When she glanced up at him, Mulder was looking at her thoughtfully, his face only inches away. Scully kept her expression neutral, as if being this close was no big thing, just part of a need to survive. "It's light outside," she commented, noting the daylight seeping into the dimness of the shelter. He apparently accepted her comment at face value. He merely said, "Hold on a second." They withdrew from each other slightly and Mulder unzipped their parkas, then they both hastily thrust their arms into their respective sleeves, zipping up again. Scully sat up stiffly and crawled over Mulder's legs to get to the shelter entrance. The covering branches were heavy with snow when she pushed them aside, and she stared out, blinking at the whiteness, unable to find words. It was beautiful, white and smooth as the icing on a wedding cake. Heavily frosted branches festooned the level surface of the deep snow, and some of the smaller trees were bent and bowed by cloaks of white. Their tracks were gone as if they'd never existed. The forest was silent and gave no hint of which way the path lay. Every direction looked alike now. And the snow was still coming down. And what sky she could see was still heavy with it. "Oh, God," she breathed fervently. "Scully?" She glanced over her shoulder at him, her face pale and her eyes huge, then wriggled her way out of the shelter, knowing that he would be right behind her. Her feet felt like blocks of wood. She didn't think that she would be able to feel them anymore, but she bit her lip with the pain when she finally stood up. She thrust the pain away from her as much as possible and used her arms to push the drifted snow away from the entrance so that they could stand. She had cleared a small space when Mulder exited the shelter feet first. He was silent when he saw how much it had snowed during the night, and reached out to rest his gloved hands on her shoulders, drawing her back against him, as if he would keep her from plowing out mindlessly through the deadly snow. "They'll find the car," he said at last. "Someone should have spotted the smoke from the fire." "Yes," agreed Scully, but she knew she was echoing his conviction to try to convince herself. "The ranger station knew we were coming, too. They'll have notified the local Search and Rescue team." His hands tightened on her shoulders. "Even without tracks, they'll figure out where we are," he reassured her. "Stay here a minute." It took a little while for him to wade through the snow, thigh deep on him, to clear an easier way for his smaller partner to a spot of relative privacy behind an evergreen. When he came trudging stiff-legged back down his path, pushing snow to the side with his boots, he waved to her to go on. "Make it quick," he said briefly. "And call me if you need help," he added, watching as she moved down the path, her steps uncertain and obviously painful. He knew that she wouldn't ask for help. And he knew that she wouldn't be able to hike out of here. And he wouldn't leave without her. They were effectively trapped. While she was gone, he quickly stripped off his parka, then his oversize sweatshirt, his flannel shirt, and the turtleneck under that. The cold-weather long-sleeved thermal silk undershirt came off, then, leaving him with his white T-shirt. Rolling the silk undershirt up, he held it between his knees while he put the rest of his layers back on, the cold cutting through him as he lost most of his accumulated warmth. He was zipping his parka again, shivering, when Scully came stumbling back down the path he'd cleared. "Here." He put the rolled shirt into her hands. "Go inside and put that on, over your T-shirt, under your flannel shirt." "But, Mulder --" "Don't argue with me, Scully. Please. I wore more layers than you did. So either you put it on, or I'll put it on for you." "Mulder...." "Please, Scully." His partner's gaze was very blue in this light as she looked at him from under her hood, but after a moment she turned and dropped to her knees, pushing her way back into the shelter. He hunched his shoulders inside his parka and looked around their campsite. It was still snowing in a sluggish sort of way, enough to prevent a rescue; anyway, the trees grew too closely for anyone to see them from the air. When rescue came, it would come from the main road. The logging road in. Where was it? Mulder closed his eyes for a second, visualizing the scene from yesterday, seeing his position, Scully's position.... He turned slowly to his left, his eyes still closed. When the movement and the scene in his mind came together, he opened his eyes, and found himself looking at a gap between the trees that looked like half a dozen such gaps around their shelter. He took his glove off, feeling the cold bite at his bare hand before he shoved it in his pocket and brought out a small can of fluorescent orange spray paint. Don't leave home without it, he thought wryly, turning to the entrance and moving the can in an arching sweep as he marked their location for the searchers. "Scully?" "Yeah?" she responded after a moment, her voice muffled, apparently by his shirt as she pulled it over her head. "Break out some food, will you? I'll be right back." "Mulder, don't go out of sight of the shelter," she said sharply. "I won't. I just want to mark as much of the trail as I can see." He sprayed as many of the trees as possible with an arrow pointing in their direction before the increasing snowfall and the cold drove him back to the shelter. He was careful to brush as much of the snow from himself as he could before he insinuated himself inside once more. Scully was dressed again, her hood tied tightly around her face, hiding the brightness of her hair. She silently offered half a sandwich and an apple to her partner when he had finished settling himself beside her. "Everything's marked," he commented, starting on the sandwich. "They shouldn't have any trouble finding us." Scully made a noncommittal noise and bit into her apple, her eyes on his face. She didn't say anything, but he saw her gaze drifting thoughtfully over his face. Frostbite, he thought, the answer coming to him suddenly. She was looking for the telltale whitening of nose and cheeks. "Not yet," he answered her unformed question. "We slept too close last night for facial frostbite, and we weren't out long enough just now. But our feet...." He paused. She nodded, nibbling her apple core, trying to appear at ease. "The biggest danger is thawing then refreezing," she told him. "And swelling. So we shouldn't take our boots off even to check." There was silence for a few minutes, each of them busy with thoughts of what would happen if they weren't found soon. "The temperature's falling again, isn't it," she said finally. Mulder nodded, finishing his own apple core. "More snow coming?" He nodded again, looking at her steadily in the dim light inside the shelter. "Any chance of making a fire?" "I looked for wood while I was spray painting the trees. The snow's too deep and what downed branches there are look too green and too wet." Her gaze met his and didn't waver, refusing to admit to fear. She took a deep breath. "Want to help me work a logic problem?" she asked at last. "It'll give us something to do." Mulder's eyes shifted to her pack as she delved into it and extracted a tattered puzzle book, a pencil, and a flashlight. He knew she was wanting to distract herself, to keep their minds occupied as long as she could, before the effects of the cold sapped their energy, their ability to think clearly. "Even here I can't escape," he said aloud, mock hollowly. "I'm up to level three," Scully assured him lightly, pressing the book into his hands with a smile that warmed him more than a fire would have. Mulder looked down at the turned-back page in the light of the flashlight she held and read aloud. "'Ten friends, each of whom has moved to a different city --' Scully, come on...." "Go on, Mulder." He sighed and continued. "'Five of them sent e-mail messages to the other five. The first five are three men and two women, the second five are three women and two men. Determine from the six clues given the senders, the recipients, and the city for each.' Scully, if the cold doesn't kill me, the boredom will." "The first clue," she began, ignoring his grumble, "is 'Rebecca, who sent a message to a man, isn't the one who sent a message to Reno, Nevada.'" *** The day passed slowly, with Mulder doggedly working his way through the puzzle book with her, letting Scully enjoy herself by prodding him onward. They had made it to level four before they stopped for the night. Though she was disinclined to go out into the storm, he ventured out briefly to make sure that his paint wasn't being covered by the blowing snow. This had to be the height of the storm, he decided optimistically. It couldn't go on much longer. They couldn't go on much longer. When he crawled back inside the shelter, he dug the candy bar out of her pack and gave it to her wordlessly, his expression in the reflected light of the flashlight warning her not to argue about eating it. She ate it without protest, blinking slowly to hold off sleep, looking up at the crystalline ceiling of their shelter. Their breath had frozen on the branches laced above them and the accumulated frost glittered like tiny diamonds before he switched off the flashlight. "I don't feel as cold as I did," she told him matter-of-factly, knowing what it meant. He nodded, still silent, and helped her get her arms out of her parka's sleeves before he shrugged out of his own and zipped their parkas together for the night. This time he tucked her hands and forearms under the front of his sweatshirt, sandwiching her hands between their bodies when he pulled her to him. She was asleep almost before he finished fitting their bodies together to share as much warmth as possible. Without being taxed for it, his photographic memory was busily bringing up various bits of pertinent information to disturb him. 'Frostbite is the body's way of preserving heat by shutting down circulation to an extremity. Unfortunately, as you develop frostbite you might not even know you have it because of the numbness.' 'The mildest stage of hypothermia begins at a body temperature of about 96 degrees. Symptoms include shivering, lethargy, slow pulse and a general decrease in alertness.' Mulder held her close throughout the night, the wind keeping him awake as it whined and occasionally howled through the trees. It sounded like the storm was alive, like it was looking for them. He was afraid that it had found Scully. *** He had a hard time waking her in the morning. When he finally dragged her back to consciousness, he didn't bother trying to make the attempt to get out of the shelter. He knew that they weren't physically capable of it any longer. Instead, to keep her awake and as alert as possible, he worked more logic problems with her, sharing the trail mix until it was gone, and the hours crept by. They were up to level six when he finally stopped, his gloved hands too numb to hold the pencil any longer, and he looked down at Scully lying beside him. Her eyes were still open, still blinking, but her responses to his questions had been forced since noontime, and for the past hour she had been answering him in non-sequiters, when she answered him at all. His movements too controlled, Mulder put away the puzzle book and pencil, and his mouth was tight with anger at their helplessness as he pulled his arms out of his coat sleeves with restrained violence. Scully didn't respond , didn't try to help him, when he eased her out of her parka and zipped their coats together for what he knew would be last time. His hands were gentle as he drew her into an intimate embrace once more, trying to soothe the periodic tremors that shook her. He knew he wasn't far from that state himself; he had stopped feeling the cold, too. They weren't going to be found in time. He knew that, now. And all of this over a Bigfoot sighting by two park rangers, he thought bitterly. Even he only half believed in Bigfoot. Most of the physical evidence was non-persuasive and nearly all of the photographic evidence was flatly unconvincing and obviously faked. So why had he dragged Scully into the back of freezing nowhere, as she had so poetically put it, to investigate a phenomenon that he didn't believe and a teenage boy's disappearance that had the classic hallmarks of a family spat or a kid's prank? Because one of the rangers had a brother in the local Bureau field office who had requested Mulder by name, which had made Skinner snide, which in turn had pissed Mulder off. Scully was right. It was his fault, Mulder admitted. He lifted his head for a moment to look down at her in the murky light of the shelter. Her face was very pale, the veins blue beneath the translucent skin at her temples and eyelids. She looked like she was made of cold, white marble. He tucked her face into his neck and tightened his arms around her, holding her closely, protectively, as if the storm outside could physically pull them apart. He accepted that the intimacy of their embrace was as much emotional now as physical. But it was coming too late; she couldn't feel it. There were things that he wished he had been able to say to her. He was sorry he hadn't been able to verbalize them, but he hoped that she knew what they were. Scully had always been so good at second guessing him. He hoped she knew. He wasn't thinking any too clearly himself, he thought, smiling faintly, his mouth touching her hair. As he felt himself drifting off to sleep, he wondered if this overwhelming feeling of helplessness and impotent rage was what Scully had felt on the ship in the North Sea as she watched him fall asleep, knowing that he wouldn't wake, and there wasn't a thing she could do to help. *** There was light on his closed eyelids. Diffused light, he realized dimly, and knew that he should wake, but he was warm and sleep was too comfortable to leave just yet. "You okay, Mulder?" Scully's voice wanted to know, a hint of a smile in her tone. His eyes snapped open. "Yeah, I'm fine," he said automatically, not really believing it yet. He was sitting upright on a comfortable couch with Scully beside him in what looked like a hospital waiting room. It was clean, impersonal, with no windows, and a source of light that he couldn't pinpoint. The open door showed a long, empty hallway that disappeared into dimness. There was a scattering of chairs, tables and couches around the spacious room. But he and Scully were the only people there: no doctors, no nurses, no patients, no waiting family - not in the room, not in the hallway. From the lack of activity, it must be the middle of the night, he thought vaguely. Memory of the storm returned with a suddenness that surprised him and he got up quickly, flexing his fingers and taking a tentative step or two. He didn't feel cold or numb. In fact, he felt pretty good. He wasn't hungry, he wasn't tired, he wasn't.... His natural caution kicked in, then. Why did he feel this good after almost freezing to death? he wondered. There should be aftereffects even if they'd been rescued shortly after he passed out. He looked around the room, but his parka and gloves were nowhere to be seen, and when he pushed back his sleeve to check his watch for the time and date, it was gone. "My watch is missing, too," Scully offered. "I woke up here a little while ago. You were here on the couch with me but you were so deeply asleep that I couldn't wake you up. No one responded when I called out, and I didn't want to leave you to check out that hallway." Mulder looked down at her thoughtfully. In her heavy cotton sweater, jeans and boots, she was only missing her parka and her mittens to look just as he'd seen her...how long ago? Her pallor was also missing, he realized, replaced by a healthy, blooming color, and the unvoiced fear in her eyes had disappeared, too. She looked calm and a little amused at his bemusement. "Okay, I'll bite," he said finally. "Where are we? What happened?" "I'm not sure what happened, and I only have a vague idea of where we are." She hesitated before going on. "I've been somewhere that had a similar feel to it. After my abduction, when I almost died. I think this is some kind of a waiting room, Mulder." He didn't say anything for a moment, trying to remember that he was the one who believed the unbelievable. "You think we're dead?" he asked finally. "I don't think so," she answered slowly, sounding uncertain. "Not yet. On the threshold, though, hence the waiting room." Mulder considered this, his eyes on her face without really seeing it as he thought the situation over. "So you think we've gone into a hypothermic coma and it's just a matter of time until we're actually dead, non-recoverable." "As far as I can tell," she nodded. "I can't come up with a more plausible explanation." "Hmmm. So this is a near death experience, then," he mused, looking around with more interest. "I've read a lot about it, but this experience -- a waiting room of sorts -- isn't documented in anything I've read. There are mostly out-of-body sensations and experiences, a bright light to move toward, encounters with loved ones -- those sorts of things." He turned his attention back to her again, his gaze sharpening as he eyed her. "I've always wondered what you might have experienced when you were unconscious all that time. Just now you said you were someplace that had a similar feel. What did you see, Scully?" "I don't remember all that well," she said evasively, shifting her position on the couch and taking the opportunity to look away from him. She was reluctant to tell him any more, but there wasn't any reason to keep it from him now, was there? Wherever she had been before, she was there again. Only this time Mulder was with her. "What things do you remember?" he asked patiently. "A light? Being outside your body in the ICU?" "Like I said, I don't remember much," she responded with equal patience. "I felt very disconnected from everything. I can remember a light, but it wasn't the classic bright light at the end of a tunnel, just a light shining down on me and making me warm. And I know my father was there with me. And then I woke up." The images had started to fade almost immediately, she remembered. It was an effort now to conjure up anything at all. And she knew that there were other things that she had heard and seen that she couldn't remember after she woke up. "So you did experience a light and encountered a loved one," he frowned thoughtfully. "Then why aren't we having that same sort of experience? And why are we experiencing whatever this is together instead of separately?" Scully shrugged. "I have no idea, Mulder. I'm not an authority, despite some slight familiarity with the subject." "It's possible," he said slowly, "that this has happened to other people, but they don't remember it when they wake up." "Maybe they don't wake up," she pointed out. "Maybe they just go on from here." He looked at her for a moment, then began to prowl the room, explore, feeling the seamless walls carefully. "I don't think so. I think there's still a possibility that we can go back." "How? If you can think of a way to get our bodies out of that damned snow and thawed out safely, just let me know, Mulder." She paused, waiting for a response, but he was silent. "I don't think we're going to be rescued in time. Our bodies are going to die. There's no sense in going back when there's nothing to go back to." "We don't know that," he said stubbornly. "People have survived worse conditions...." "Yes," she agreed. "But they make the headlines because there are so few that survive." Her partner came back to the couch slowly and sat down again, a crease between his brows. "There's nothing back there for us, Mulder," she continued gently. "Other people will take our places, do our work, follow your leads. Life will go on. So will we. Just someplace else." He pushed his fingers through his hair impatiently, not wanting to hear her talk like that, but it made sense. He didn't know how to get out of here. They were as trapped here as they had been in the snowstorm. But he didn't feel ready to die. He wasn't ready to go on. "I don't feel dead," he said out loud. "I still feel alive." "So?" "So I think I'd feel...different...if I were going to die." "Did somebody fax you information from the Great Beyond when I wasn't looking?" she asked, smiling. "Mulder, you don't know any more about an afterlife than any of the rest of living humanity. We can't possibly know what to expect." "Maybe not. But there are certain things that I had expectations about," he said stubbornly. "Like what?" "Just certain things." It was his turn to be evasive, he figured. He didn't think that now was the time to discuss comparative theologies or concepts of life after death, with or without religious connotations. But life -- if it could be called that -- in this waiting room was different from what he had expected an out-of-body experience to be. For one thing, he could still feel his body. He could feel his own weight shifting as he walked. He breathed. He blinked. He could feel muscles tightening when he clenched his fist. He was experiencing too much sensation to be dead, even nearly dead. And he most certainly was not ready to give up on life. There were too many things that he still wanted out of life to passively accept what this waiting room seemed to mean. And it wasn't his work that he wanted to go back for. He knew that without having to think twice about it. It wasn't even Samantha that kept him from accepting this situation, and that surprised him a little. The need to find Samantha had lost its urgency here. His obsession with her, with his work, had disappeared as if it had never existed. It was pointless to worry about those things when there was something of much more concern for him to think about. But what that something was was hovering just beyond his mental grasp. He could feel its importance, even feel anxious about it, but he couldn't quite.... "Mulder?" She was looking at him curiously as he struggled with his thoughts. "In a second," he said briefly, shaking his head, trying to bring his thoughts back into line. It was something that he had been thinking about before, back in the shelter during the blizzard. He went over their time together there carefully, sifting his memories for what had felt so important then that now it even outweighed his obsession with finding his sister. He shut his eyes in order to remember better, shutting out the sterility of the waiting room in order to better feel the echo of the cold, smell the resinous scent of the evergreen branches that formed their shelter. And he could feel.... He opened his eyes suddenly and got up. He knew what he had felt then. He could remember now what the unfamiliarity of their present surroundings had temporarily driven from his memory. The warmth of that memory didn't fade, either. Even here, apparently away from his body, waiting to die, he could feel that warmth. His strongest memory was of holding Scully in his arms as closely as he could, trying to warm her with his body, the fear that she wouldn't survive focusing all his attention on her. Despite the life-threatening situation, he knew that part of him had enjoyed her closeness to him, had enjoyed holding her. And he remembered wanting to give her back the support she had been giving him since their partnership began. And now he wanted to give her more than that. But they were here, waiting to die. And that didn't seem to concern her, he realized gradually. She was ready to die? That wasn't like her at all. "Scully, why are you so quick to accept all this?" he asked abruptly, turning to look down at her. "Why don't you want to go back?" She looked taken aback for a moment. "Well...because I guess there's nothing I really need to go back to. I wish my mom didn't have to go through all this again, but...." She trailed off, searching for words. "Back when the doctors had given up on you, when it seemed certain that you'd die when they took you off the respirator, you kept fighting to live. You didn't give up then. Why now?" he demanded. "What's different about this situation?" "I...I'm not sure what you're getting at, Mulder. There isn't a way back...." "I'm not saying that there is a way back now. I just want to know why you came back then." "I don't know," she said uncertainly. "Maybe it wasn't really my time. Maybe I wasn't ready. I don't know." "Don't you?" "No," Scully told him more firmly, wondering where this was taking them. She was uneasily aware that she did know why she had come back, she had thought about it quite a bit during her recovery. She just didn't want to dwell on it. And she definitely didn't want to discuss it with her persistent partner. "I don't see any point in discussing it now," she added with finality. "Because it may have a bearing --" "Mulder, why can't you just leave it alone?" she wanted to know, her voice sharp, getting up and walking away from him. "We're here. We can't go back." "Can't or won't?" he asked. "Or is it 'don't want to?'" Scully turned back to him quickly. "What do you mean by that?" "I mean that you don't want to go back. Even if you could, you don't want to go." She recovered her cool facade with an effort. "And can I infer from that that you do want to go back?" she asked as impassively as she could. He thought about his answer for a moment, looking at her as she worked to keep any emotion out of her expression and voice. "Yes, I want to go back," he told her finally. "But why, Mulder? There's nothing there...." "Yes, there is," he nodded, his voice quiet. "Or at least, there was. For me." Scully hesitated for a moment, her gaze held by his, then went back to the couch to sit down. Mulder let her avoid eye contact, watched her put up more barriers. Her arms were crossed across her chest, her legs were crossed, her face was turned away from him. "I think that we..." he began, knowing that he wasn't going to get far before she interrupted him. "Mulder, I don't think that I want to continue this conversation," she broke in. "We're going to have to agree to disagree on this one, and I think we should drop it." "Drop what?" "This conversation, this topic." "What topic, Scully?" The look she gave him should have frozen him to the bone. It was one of her better efforts, he nodded mentally, except that he was immune by now to those icy stares of hers. "Why don't you want to talk?" he persisted. "We've always been able to talk about anything and everything. We've disagreed in the past. We've argued, we've been pissed, then we got over it. But we always talked." "I don't feel like talking." "How come?" "Because I don't think that the...the topic you're going to bring up is something that we need to discuss. Not anymore." "And what topic is that?" "I know and hate that particular psych game, Mulder," she said evenly, "so put that technique away. Why can't you just accept what's happening here and go on?" "Because I don't want to go on. And I don't think that you do, either." Scully pressed her lips together against a retort and stayed stubbornly silent. "Look," he offered, "if we're dead, then talking about it won't matter. Right?" She concentrated her gaze somewhere on the wall beyond him, refusing to look at him. "Well, I'm going to talk," he shrugged. "There's no place you can go, so you have to listen." "Even if I don't want to hear it?" she asked bitterly. "Don't you care that I don't want to hear it?" "I want you to hear it because I care," he told her quietly, sitting down on the couch again as she took a step or two away from him, half turning away. "Scully, I want to go back because of you. You don't belong here. You're not ready for this yet." "Who made you an authority on what I'm ready for?" He brushed aside her question. "Why did you come back before?" he asked again, his voice very quiet in the stillness of the room. "When I sat beside your bed that night, you were dying. I could see it in your face. It hurt so much to sit there and watch you slipping away. I couldn't hold onto you. I couldn't bring you back." She still had her back to him, her shoulders braced a little under her sweater against his words. "Why did you come back, Scully? Did you come back because of me?" His question was so quiet that it was almost a whisper, but she heard it clearly anyway. It was something that she hadn't wanted to think about, hadn't wanted to answer even when she herself had first posed the question. Answering that question would open doors that were better left closed. For her own peace of mind, those doors had to stay closed and locked. "I don't know why I came back," she said finally, hoping that she sounded more convincing than she felt. "Of course I enjoyed working with you, Mulder, but I don't think that --" "Bullshit," he interrupted her abruptly. "Don't lie to me about this, Scully. After everything we've been through, after all the time we've been together -- working or whatever," he added sarcastically, "I think I deserve the truth from you." She forced herself to face him again. He was sitting on the couch, leaning forward, watching her intently. "I don't know what the truth is," she said finally, deliberately. "Unless someone hands me a cosmic answer key to my life's questions, I'll never know what 'the truth' is. But for what it's worth, I don't think that it was my time. And just as I was being made aware of that, I...I knew somehow that you were sitting with me -- with my body. I couldn't see you. I could just feel you. And I couldn't let you feel the kind of pain you were experiencing because of me. I knew that I needed to come back to stop that pain. That's all. I have a vague memory of waking up sometime later in the ICU, but I don't remember anything else." She stopped, looking away from him at the lovely impressionist landscape print on the wall behind the couch where he was sitting. "So I guess the answer to your question is that I did come back because of you." Her gaze, still impersonal, moved back to his face again. "Is that what you wanted to know?" "Yeah," he nodded, getting up. "It answers another question for me, too." "And what question is that?" "Why you're not wanting to go back now." Scully closed her eyes for a moment, gaining control of her temper, then opened them again, taking a deep breath. "Mulder, I'm not going to talk about anything else of a personal nature. And I'm not going to listen to you any further. This discussion is over." "What are you going to do? Put your fingers in your ears? I want to know why you don't want to talk about anything personal." "Because there's no point," she said curtly. "The personal aspects of our lives were left back there. That part's over." "I don't think it is. We're not dead yet." She shrugged. "Next door to it." Exasperated, he combed his fingers through his hair, beginning to feel as if he'd like to start tearing it out. His partner could be maddeningly stubborn. "Scully, don't you want to go back and have some kind of a life? A real life? Something that you might have imagined before you got buried up to your eyebrows in X-Files?" She shook her head, resigning herself to the inevitable. He just wasn't going to shut up. If they stayed here for a hundred years, he would pester her until she talked to him about these personal matters. At least, it might not actually be a hundred years; it would just feel like it. Maybe this wasn't a waiting room after all, she reflected. Maybe it was purgatory. "Don't you want a life, Scully?" She eyed him curiously. "What kind of a life do you think that might be, Mulder? A nine-to-five husband, two point five children and a house with a white picket fence? Is that what you imagine I want? Well, I don't. Maybe I thought about something along those general lines at one time, but people change, you know. I changed," she shrugged. "It might surprise you to know that I was more or less happy with my life the way it was. "I don't know what kind of life I wanted for myself in the future, but I know now that I'm too used to discussing cannibalism or giant bloodsucking worms over meals eaten at four in the morning. I'm too used to picking up the phone and hearing your voice say, 'Scully, it's me.' I know that I don't want to talk insurance or diaper rash over a normal meal at a civilized hour. I know I don't want to anyone else's voice on the phone saying, 'It's me.' And I don't want to disentangle myself from your bizarre, overcomplicated life. And work." She looked up at him, smiling faintly. "I'd be bored to tears by any man who didn't know how to carry on an intelligent conversation about mutants." Mulder didn't say anything for a long minute, just looking at her, then returned her smile wryly. "I guess I've spoiled you, huh." She shrugged a little, wandering toward the hallway door, standing just inside to look down its length. "Maybe. I don't know. All I do know is that I'm not as unhappy with this situation as you seem to be." She glanced over her shoulder at him. "What about you, Mulder? You needed to get a life worse than I did. Is that why you want to go back? To try to get a life? Sort of a second chance?" Shoving his hands into his jeans pockets, he shook his head slowly. "No, not really. The way things were going, with the background I had, I wasn't ever going to get a life. In searching for Samantha, I pretty much made a decision to sacrifice everything else in my life. Especially relationships. I just didn't have time for them. Finding my sister and working on the X-Files were the only important things in my life for a long time. Nothing else mattered." He paused, looking past her down the corridor to the darkness at the far end. "And then you were assigned to work with me. As ticked as I was at the time, it was the best thing that ever happened to me. You poked holes in my theories, questioned them, made me question them, and generally grounded me in reality again. I didn't always agree with you," he added, smiling, "but I was never bored. "I've never been closer to anyone than I am to you, Scully. You listen to me when no one else does. You try to understand me when no one else does. I trust you when I don't even trust myself, much less anyone else. I rely on your judgment, your intuition, your strength. You fit into...into what passes for my life," his mouth twisted a little, "as if you were a piece of me that I didn't know was missing until it was taken away from me." She looked over at him when he fell silent. They both knew how important each was to the other, and had had good reasons for not verbalizing it and acting on it in the past. And, really, the words had never been necessary. They lived it every day. "We need to go back," he said at last, turning away from his contemplation of the hallway to look down at her at his side. "We don't belong here." "How do you know that? We're here, and there isn't a way out," she reminded him wearily. "We're all but dead. I don't know why you keep insisting that we need --" He interrupted her with a gesture, reaching out suddenly to take her hand in a grip so tight it made her wince. "Can you feel that?" "Yes! Mulder, that hurts!" His hold loosened, but he continued holding her hand. "You can feel that, Scully. Feel it. Once we're dead, that kind of sensation will be gone forever. We're not dead. Not yet. And we're here together, not separately. There must be a reason for that. There has to still be a chance that we can make it back." Scully tried to pull her hand out of his but he refused to let it go. "Back to what?" she almost yelled, struggling to free her hand. "I thought we'd gone over this! I don't want to go back! There's nothing --" It happened so quickly. A quick tug at her hand pulled her off balance and, as she stumbled against him, he pulled her even closer, his free hand cupping her cheek, tilting her chin up. And then he was kissing her, his mouth moving over hers hungrily, demanding a response that she couldn't help giving any more than she could stop breathing. Her breath caught in her throat as his arms tightened around her, and the pressure of his kiss coaxed her lips apart. Her eyes tightly closed, all she could feel was Mulder, all she could taste was him. Without conscious thought, her hands moved up, over his shoulders, behind his neck, holding him there, not wanting this to stop. She dimly heard her own faint moan of appreciation as he explored her mouth thoroughly, taking his time, and could feel his mouth curving against hers, feel his pleasure, as she held him closer and began her own exploration of his. His fingers were tangled in her hair and they were both breathless by the time he reluctantly lifted his head, ending the kiss for the moment. He didn't release her, though, and didn't show any inclination to do so, touching his lips to the corner of her mouth briefly. "Feel more alive?" he wanted to know, his voice a little hoarse. Scully nodded wordlessly. She didn't think she could form a coherent sentence, but she certainly did feel alive, a little too alive for comfort, if the truth be told. "We're not dead, Scully," he whispered, his lips brushing her ear. "Not if we can feel all of this. And if we're not dead, there's got to be a way to go back." She cleared her throat, closing her eyes briefly in pleasure at the sensations his mouth was stirring in her. "Okay, let's say we can find a way back. Should we go back?" "What do you mean?" "I mean that, assuming we make it back, we either remember this experience or we don't. If we don't remember it, we're right back where we started from, lack of a life and everything. If we do remember it, then that poses a whole new set of questions." "I hate to be trite, Scully, but questions are there to be answered." "We might not like the answers," she said, suddenly serious, gently pushing him away. Mulder straightened with a sigh and looked down at her, reaching out to smooth her hair where his fingers had tumbled it. "I know what you mean." "What is it that we want?" she gestured helplessly. "A one-night stand? A relationship? A commitment? And how will any of those affect the way we work together? Will getting involved with each other affect our friendship? Will it be worth it?" Mulder shrugged. "I don't know, Scully. I really don't. But although I may not know what the hell I want to do about us, I sure as hell know it can't be done when we're dead," he reminded her pointedly, breaking her gaze to look around the room, hoping for inspiration, his eyes finally lighting on the big landscape print on the wall behind the couch, for lack of a better focus. "I'd say there's no doubt about that," Scully agreed dryly. "Offhand -- and assuming that we remember any of this, and despite how much I enjoyed what happened just now -- I'd say that we shouldn't get physical too quickly. I've seen a lot of friendships wrecked by sex. I don't think that's where we are right now." She nodded her agreement. "Then the question becomes 'where are we?'" "Right now? Stuck in this damn waiting room," he answered almost absently. "Mmm," she grimaced, looking up at him. But Mulder wasn't paying attention to her any longer. His eyes were fixed on a point behind her head. When she turned, all she could see was the framed landscape print, a garden of some sort done in an excellent impressionist style, with a large, elaborate gate pictured slightly off center. A very nice picture, but nothing to earn her partner's sudden interest. Frowning, Mulder pointed at the picture. "Scully, look!" "At what?" she asked, looking obediently, if blankly. "I don't see anything. Just a print." "No, no. Look at the reflection in the glass." Scully refocused on the reflected light in the glass of the picture. It only looked like a reflection of themselves standing in front of the painting, like a mirror, with the corridor behind them, the bright light from the hallway overheads showing the two of them almost silhouetted. "Do you see?" Mulder demanded. "See what? I see us, the room, the hallway...." An arm around her shoulders, he turned them both suddenly to face the hallway before she could complete her litany. The hall stretched out in front of them, only three or four overheads relieving the darkness that crept nearer the waiting room door. Mulder's hands released her and she half turned to look over her shoulder at the reflection in the glass again. Light. She turned her head to look at the hallway. Dark. Light. Dark. "It's not the same hallway," Scully said slowly. "This one," Mulder pointed at the print, "is the classic light-at-the- end-of-the-tunnel hallway." "And this one," Scully gestured at the real hallway before them, "is...what? If that one is the corridor...onwards, let's say...then you think this dark hallway is the road...back?" "Must be. Has to be." "You really think we should try to go back?" She felt oddly reluctant to say those words, now that there was a real possibility that they really could go back. "Don't you?" he asked, looking down at her. "We might be able to pick up where we left off," he reminded her, his arm around her shoulders tightening a little, pulling her closer. It was a tempting thought, but Scully hesitated, glancing away from Mulder to look at the reflected corridor, at the warmth of the light that flowed down on her upturned face. She had left it once before, gone back to her world, gone back to Mulder. But Mulder was here and this time she didn't want to turn her back on that warm, welcoming light. It would welcome them both. Warmth enfolded her at the thought. They'd be together here in the light, never have to be separated again. And it wasn't just white light, either, she saw, but the most beautiful colors, delicate shades.... ++++++++++++++++++++ "Don't look at the light, Scully," his voice whispered urgently in her ear, but dimly, as if he wasn't quite beside her any more. But the light was so attractive.... He'd follow her. She knew he would. And the warmth was reaching out for her.... "Scully...." His voice was further away. His voice? Whose voice? "Scully....Scully!" She felt suddenly disoriented, confused, the brightness coming and going...and his voice was louder, calling her name, calling her back...to him? In some surprise she realized that Mulder's hands on her shoulders were hurting her as he shook her hard, her head snapping back on her neck. "Stop," she gasped. "Stop it, Mulder. You're hurting me." With a heartfelt, thankful sigh he hugged her close, holding her face against his shoulder, away from the light. "Oh, God. Don't do that to me, Scully. Stay with me." He ducked his head to look into her face. "Are you okay now?" Her head moved slightly against his shoulder. "No." He eased her away from him slightly and his breath was warm on her face as his lips touched hers gently. "I can't make up your mind for you, Dana -- but I can try. I want you to stay with me. I want us to try going back. Together. But you've got to come willingly or I don't think this will work." She didn't say anything for a moment, looking up at him. He smiled a little, his fingertip caressing her cheek for an instant before pushing a tendril of hair away from her face. "I want to go home, Mulder," she said at last. "Do you think we'll make it?" "We can only try. Just don't look at the light." He turned her carefully, keeping his back to the lit corridor and his body between Scully and the warm light flowing from the print. "You'll be ready for that someday," he promised her. "Just not today." "Why isn't it affecting you the way it is me?" she wanted to know. "Can you feel it?" "Oh, yes. I'm not immune, Scully," he said feelingly. "I'm just concentrating on something else, that's all." "Oh?" "Yeah. I keep thinking how good it felt to kiss you. And I keep thinking of how I want to be able to do it again. And I keep reminding myself that if I give in to the temptation to stay, all of that will disappear." "But, Mulder, if we don't remember any of this --" "If we don't remember what happened here, I have faith that our relationship will work itself out eventually," he said firmly, his arm around her encouraging her to keep up her pace as he felt her beginning to slow down. "We can't ignore what we feel forever. We'll do something about it someday." I hope, he added silently. The hallway seemed endless to Mulder as he shepherded Scully into the darkness. He could feel the warmth of the light on his back and knew that Scully felt it more strongly, even though he was shielding her from it as much as possible. Her steps were still slowing, beginning to drag. "What is it?" he asked. "What's wrong?" "I think we're near the end of the hallway," she said faintly. "Why?" "I feel cold and I'm hurting. I wasn't before." Mulder stopped, his hands on her arms. "This will be your last chance, Dana. I don't want to offer you an out, but I have to. Do you want to come back with me? Is that what you really want? Or are you wanting to go back to the waiting room - and go on from there?" She looked up at him, trying to see his face in the near darkness. "Why are you asking me that, Mulder? I said I'd go back with you." "You've got to be sure. If you're not really sure you want to go back, I think that you might not make it back with me." "What makes you think that?" "Because I don't feel the cold you're feeling. I'm not hurting. I think it's a barrier of some kind and it'll keep you from making it back because you're not one hundred percent sure that you want to go." Scully hesitated, turning slowly, deliberately, to look past Mulder at the light at the far end of the hallway. Mulder shifted, his body blocking her view. But the light flowed around him, silhouetting him in its strength and warmth, forcing her to see both her choices at once. She had no sense of time passing, but was startled out of her continuing bemusement into a sudden sharp awareness of herself by the fleeting touch of his mouth on hers. And then, suddenly, she was kissing him with a passion that was edged with desperation, her hands holding onto him, anchoring herself to him. This was what she wanted, she realized finally. She wanted Mulder. She wanted to argue with him, theorize with him, work with him, laugh with him, be with him. Love him. The light wasn't an option if Mulder wasn't going to be there with her. Just like she had before, she would go back because of him. This time, hopefully, she would come back with him, to him. She drew back a little from his embrace, finally, her lips clinging to his for another second before she opened her eyes. He was smiling at her, that warm, special smile that she didn't often see. "Please tell me you're coming back with me." The light would always be there. But Mulder needed her now. And she needed him. "Scully?" "Let's go, Mulder. I'm freezing standing here." His hands tightened on her shoulders and he kissed her once, fiercely, briefly, before he straightened, taking her hand to lead her on. "I want to make sure we don't get separated," he explained. "Don't worry," Scully smiled, holding his hand a little tighter as a shield against the dark. "I won't lose you that easily." And there was no warning. One moment their feet were on solid ground, the next moment they were falling. Scully couldn't feel Mulder's hand, if indeed she was still holding it, and she couldn't tell if she cried out as she fell. She could see nothing, hear nothing, feel nothing. Nothing except the cold, and she closed her eyes against the piercing chill of it. *** Dim memories swirled around him like the water in which he was immersed. A painting on a wall. Diamonds winking on the ceiling. Holding her tightly to keep the storm from taking her away from him. 'Did you come back because of me?' A waiting room. Waiting to die. Wanting to live. Holding her tightly, kissing her until he was dizzy. 'Feel more alive now?' Spraying the doorway with orange paint. The light was so beautiful, so warm. The snow was so cold. They were dying. She was freezing in his arms as he held her. Scully.... "His eyes are open." Were they? He hadn't noticed. "Mr. Mulder, can you hear me?" He lifted his gaze from the water in front of him with an effort. A woman he didn't know was looking down at him. Wading his way through the confusing memories, he felt them beginning to slip away as he focused his concentration on the present with an effort of will. He knew that clinical, assessing look. A doctor. "Can you hear me?" she repeated. His lips and tongue worked to form a word. "Yeah," he croaked, then cleared his throat with an effort. They'd had him on a respirator. He could feel the residual tightness in his chest and the invisible hand clenched around his throat that he associated with it. Becoming more aware of his surroundings, he could feel the pain, now. His body was on fire. That was his first halfway coherent thought, the scalding pain in his hands and feet making him gasp involuntarily. His second thought, when he could push the pain to the back of his mind, was that he was in water. Water? A metal tub of some kind? The water felt boiling hot after the coldness of that long fall.... No, not a fall, he frowned. They hadn't fallen. It was the storm. They'd been trapped in a blizzard. Why did he think he had fallen? Slowly, he became conscious of other things. Low-voiced conversation, orders and responses. Movement around him. Subliminal whirs and clicks and beeps of machines. The soft sound and feel of the water lapping around him, nearly up to his chin. "Core body temp ninety-eight, doctor," said another voice from somewhere behind him.. "Okay, he's stable for now. Let's get him out of the tub. Move him up to moderate care and begin frostbite therapy. Monitor vitals--" "Wait," he managed to get out as he was lifted, the air on his wet skin cooling the false sense of heat in his extremities. "Scully -- my partner. Where's Scully?" He was ignored for a moment as he was wrapped warmly, transferred to a gurney, and covered by a heated blanket. "Where's Scully?" he repeated, trying and failing to inject authority into his hoarse voice. The dark-haired nurse strapping him in securely smiled reassuringly at him and tilted her head briefly toward the other side of the large, professionally cluttered trauma room. "Don't worry, she's over there." "...She...Is she okay?" "Her core temperature isn't rising as fast as yours did. They're working to stabilize her now." When they turned his gurney slightly to navigate it out of the trauma room, he caught a quick glimpse of his partner's face above the metal sides of the tub she was in. She looked bloodless, whiter than the snow that had nearly killed them, her lips forced open by the respirator tube. He had seen her like that once before, her life dependent on the technology around her, and he hadn't liked it then, either. It didn't seem right that someone who wanted to be in control of her life so much should be so helpless, or that someone so full of life should look so lifeless. She had needed him to get her back. Back from the cold? Or back from.... He frowned as the gurney paused for the nurse to murmur something to a colleague. Back from....? He groped desperately for the fading memories. There had been a room, he remembered. A waiting room. And Scully's body had been warm -- not cold -- against his as she promised to come back with him. Where was she now? he wondered, feeling suddenly cold -- cold that had nothing to do with his physical temperature -- mentally picturing her lost between worlds, unable to come back. What would he do if she didn't.... His thought, his imagination, couldn't progress any further. Even as he was being maneuvered out of the doorway, though, his attention was caught by a harsh gasp against the rhythm of the respirator and when he turned his head to look, he saw that the orchestrated movement around Scully had increased. Then his gurney was through the doorway and his view was cut off. But he had seen enough. Scully had found her way back, he smiled to himself, relief flooding through him. The gurney continued moving and he closed his eyes against the overhead lights that shone down mercilessly, letting himself drift. It was too much effort to hold onto the memories right now. There was no need. Scully would be all right, he assured himself tiredly. That was what was important. She was going to be fine. They both would. *** "If the doctors and nurses would leave me the hell alone, I'd feel better faster." "Quit complaining, Mulder," Scully said unsympathetically, watching her partner sit on the side of his hospital bed and rotate his ankles in the precise, even movements prescribed in their physical therapy. It was not an interesting or inspiring sight. "At least we're alive. And we're going to keep our toes, even if we're not enjoying the process of frostbite reversal." Almost against her will, her gaze was drawn back to the curtained window that made a frame for the beautiful view of the mountains, green frosted with bridal white, just touched with lavender shadows as new storm clouds moved in gradually to dim the pale sunlight. They had barely survived the last storm, and the new one would erase all traces of their presence from the mountain, she thought. As if they'd never been there. As if it had never happened. Mulder lifted his eyes, watching her with the sense of unease, uncertainty, that had been wrapped around him like a garment since he'd awoken, fully conscious and aware, in this hospital room four days before. Scully was too quiet, too distracted. And she'd been strangely elusive during their recovery, not spending any more time with him than necessary. Something had happened out there on the mountain. He knew that. He couldn't drag the specifics out of his uncharacteristically uncooperative memory, but he could feel the tension between them. And that hurt almost more than the damned frostbite did. "They don't leave you alone," he reiterated, knowing that his voice was too sharp, but wanting to make some kind of impression on her. Anything to make her the Scully he knew again. "They wake you up in the middle of the night to find out whether you're sleeping okay. They..." "They do it in my room, too," she reminded him, turning away from her contemplation of the scene outside. "Look, we've only got a couple of more days here. Just put up with it for a little longer. Have you heard anything about the assignment we were on? Has anyone else been put on it?" Mulder sighed, suppressing a wince as he began flexing his toes as best he could. He was in a rotten mood and bitching at her wasn't going to make him feel any better; it would just piss her off and drive her back to her room, leaving him by himself again. And he didn't want her to leave him. Mulder," she tried again, her voice just a little softer. "If something's bothering you, tell me what it is. Maybe I can help. Is it the case?" He looked over at her thoughtfully. She was sitting on the empty bed opposite, her head slightly tilted, waiting for his response. She always listened to him, no matter how "out there" his theories were, no matter how painful the memories, she was always there to listen to him. He owed her better than silence after half-killing her in the snow. "You're more likely to kill me than help me," he told her finally. She was not going to like what he had to say. "I got a call from the local field office," he continued. "The missing kid we were after turned up again -- he'd been staying with a friend in Seattle after an argument with his father. And those two rangers who said they saw something in the forest? Well, now they're disagreeing on exactly what they saw. A bear. No, a mountain lion. Or maybe it was just the weird shadow from some bush or something." For a moment, she couldn't think. She could only feel. For one brief moment, she wasn't an FBI agent, she was just a woman -- and for just a second she wanted to wrap her hands around Mulder's neck and squeeze until he was an attractive shade of blue. He'd hauled them out here into a blizzard for nothing. They'd almost died over his stubborn insistence -- She pulled herself together after a long minute, thrusting the fantasy of violence against her partner back into the little closet that it peeked out of once in a while, and shook her head. She had chosen to come with him on this wild goose chase. Wild beast chase, she corrected herself with a mental smile. It wasn't entirely his fault. Scully let the wry smile work its way out to curve her lips. "So what you're trying to tell me is that we came all the way out here and nearly froze to death...for nothing. No missing kid. No Bigfoot. Just us on ice." "That pretty much covers it." He looked down at his feet, absently curling his toes. "Scully, I'm sorry. Really. There wasn't enough evidence to justify us coming all the way out here and my temper nearly got you killed. I let emotion win out over professionalism and this is what comes of it. And I'm mad at myself for screwing up so badly this time." He fell silent, waiting for the stinging response that he felt sure was coming...and that he deserved. "Guess I win the Your Fault game, then," she shrugged, still smiling as he glanced up, surprised, then shook her head. "No, Mulder, that's not true. It was my fault as much as yours for coming with you, for giving validity to a case that I knew didn't have enough evidence to begin with. If I'd protested strongly enough, made my case well enough to you -- or to Skinner -- then we wouldn't be here." "You are supposed to kind of keep me in line, aren't you," Mulder agreed, relaxing a little, a smile of his own beginning to tug at the corners of his mouth. Scully wasn't mad. She had every right to cut him into little pieces, but she wasn't mad. "I'd need a whip and a chair to keep you in line," she told him dryly, getting up, easing her weight onto her feet carefully. "Leaving so soon?" he asked, something in his chest tightening at the thought. "I've got a chair, and I can arrange for a whip. Might be fun," he forced a grin. "I've had enough fun with you for a while, thanks. I'd better get back to my room. Lunch will be arriving soon." "Or what passes for it." Scully hesitated. Mulder didn't want to be alone; she could feel it. And she couldn't stop herself from wanting to stop whatever it was that was disturbing him so. Maybe she could coax it out of him.... Keep it casual, she told herself. "You could always join me for lunch," she suggested after a moment. As much as he didn't want her to leave, he was half afraid to be with her. He didn't know why, but memories moved sluggishly in his mind, just out of his grasp, fueling his uneasiness. "No, thanks," he managed to respond, equally casual. "I'm waiting to see if that candy-striper took me up on the bribe I offered her for bringing me a couple of hot dogs." "Suit yourself." He was scared, Scully thought. "If you change your mind, you know where I am. The lunch cart's coming," she finished, heading for the doorway slowly. "Yeah, be sure not to miss it," Mulder agreed sardonically, not looking forward to being alone with his thoughts after she left, yet oddly unsettled with her in the room with him. He didn't like this sense of fear he'd been experiencing, along with flashes about the cold, about a warm light. And ever-present was that lurking, nagging fear. Fear of losing Scully. But she was here, he argued with himself. She was warm and alive and HERE. He could see that. He shouldn't be wanting to take her hand, just to make sure she was okay. The urge to reach out for her baffled him. His need for her frightened him. Mulder watched his partner shuffle across the floor to the doorway. Her progress looked painful and he knew from personal experience that it was. It felt like walking on hot coals, sometimes. Wouldn't that be what he would be doing with Scully now? Walking on coals? He didn't want her to see how he felt-- Reaching the doorway, she paused, half turning to say something to him, but Mulder never heard her words. The sight of her silhouetted against the light of the hallway brought him off the bed and halfway across the room before the pain of his half-healed feet caught up with him. "Scully...." Mulder stopped, stumbling, hesitating. His memories were patchy, disjointed at best. By no stretch of his excellent imagination could he call them coherent. But the door in his mind had opened for him and he just...knew. He remembered the waiting room. He remembered how she felt in his arms, how her mouth tasted. She waited, standing in the doorway, her eyebrows raised enquiringly at the sudden note of urgency in his voice. He stood barefoot, in hospital-issued pajamas and robe, in the middle of the floor, his face intense, his eyes on hers, but his sight focused on something inside himself. Maybe it had been an hallucination, he cautioned himself. Maybe he had conjured her up out of his own subconscious, projecting his own repressed thoughts and desires onto the simulacrum. What if it hadn't been real? What if he had experienced it...and she hadn't? He had to ask. He had to know. "After we passed out in the shelter," he finally said slowly, licking dry lips, "while you were unconscious, did you...dream...or something?" Scully pushed her hands into her robe pockets and leaned a shoulder against the door jamb. "Or something," she agreed cautiously after a long minute. As the silence between them stretched further and further, becoming nearly tangible, a third party in the room. He needed to know, he thought fiercely. He had to know if.... He couldn't put it into words, even in his mind. "What...what do you remember?" he asked finally, simply, hating the edge of uncertainty in his voice. He watched as Scully hesitated for a long moment, that distant look back in her eyes. He reminded himself to breathe, wondering what he would do if she remembered what he did, if she verbalized it. If she remembered, would it change their partnership as it currently existed, possibly put an unbearable strain on their friendship? Maybe some truths weren't meant to be spoken out loud, he thought, feeling suddenly cold. Not yet. "What do you...." His throat closed and he couldn't continue. But Scully was smiling faintly, now, one hand pushing the hair back from her face. "I remember enough, Mulder." He nodded slowly, his eyes on her face, and said nothing when she turned and disappeared down the hallway, beginning the short shuffle toward her room. Shutting his eyes, he could feel the tension melting out of his shoulders, his neck. Her words had eased the tightness in his chest. So today wouldn't be the day that they made the giant leap, he smiled a little whimsically. A small step was more than enough. With the way he felt about Scully, it was all he could handle right now. Until they both needed more. Until they were ready to take another step. Or two. Feeling suddenly better -- and hungry -- Mulder opened his eyes, looking around at the spartan room, noting the lunch tray that someone had left for him -- oh, great, while he had been standing there in the middle of the floor, eyes closed, smiling to himself. Psych evaluation, here I come, he grimaced, retrieving the tray. His own company in this cheerless room was less appealing now. Lunch with Scully -- even the hospital's food -- was sounding better and better. Mulder was smiling again as he began his own shuffle down the hall to his partner's room. (end) Blizzard 1/11/96 ++++++++++++++++++++ SciNut(O'tay!) / XFF SciNut host EMXC "If the Truth is copyrighted... E-mail it! ********************** "The critical mind is the creative mind." -David Duchovny ********************** "Never believe anything until it's been officially denied." -Claud Cockburn(1904-1981) **********************