Date: Wed, 03 Mar 1999
TITLE: Exaiphnes IV: Crescent City
AUTHOR: Marti
E-MAIL: oakgirls@yahoo.com
DISTRIBUTION: Gossamer and Xemplary okay, others please ask.
SPOILERS: None, really, but set post-FTF and in Homicide season 7
(mentions
"Homicide.com")
RATING: R (sexual activity)
CLASSIFICATION: Crossover - Homicide: Life on the Street
KEYWORDS: slash; Mulder/other romance
SUMMARY: Mulder invites Tim Bayliss to join him on a business
trip to New
Orleans.
DISCLAIMER: This story is based on the characters and
situations created by
Chris Carter, the Fox Network and Ten Thirteen Productions as
well as NBC
and Baltimore Pictures. As such, the characters named are the
property of
those entities and are used without permission, although no
copyright
infringements are intended. The following work is for the
distribution and
entertainment of fanfic members only. Any further distribution of
this
work without the author's consent is in violation of
international law.
AUTHOR'S NOTES: This is the fourth installment in the
Exaiphnes series
Rachel and I started recently. You can probably read this episode
without
knowledge of the others, but if you're interested, they can be
found at:
www.oocities.org:80/Area51/Dimension/3568/Exaiphnes/exaiphnes.html.
Thanks to Shirley Smiley for hosting us on her MTA site! Thanks
also go to
Rachel, Valeria, and Gerry for their speedy beta-reading and
their
perceptive comments. Feedback gladly received at
oakgirls@yahoo.com
Exaiphnes IV: Crescent City (1/2)
Tim Bayliss looked at his watch again. Hadn't they said they
would meet at
3:30? It wasn't that long a walk over here from the convention
center.
Taking another sip of his coffee, he tasted the pleasing bite
of chicory
mixed with the smoothness of the milk, the perfect complement to
the
sweetness of the beignets smothered in powdered sugar. He hoped
Mulder
wouldn't mind that he had gone ahead and ordered without him, but
since the
other man was thirty minutes late, Tim figured he had it coming.
He was glad he had gotten a seat on the edge of the patio so
he could see
the streaming parade of people on the street. Most of them were
tourists
-- so he deduced from the cameras and Bourbon Street teeshirts.
That's
detective work for you, he said to himself wryly. But what was
with those
kids dressed all in black, body piercings everywhere, chains
attaching
their wallets to their belt loops -- they were walking arm in arm
and
pulling a dog behind them on a leash. Tourists or natives? He
wasn't
sure, since he hadn't been there long enough yet to get a feel
for the
place. He had just arrived that morning and had only gotten as
far as
taking a cab to the hotel and then figuring out how to walk over
to Cafe du
Monde, where Mulder was supposed to be meeting him after
finishing with his
conference panel. Why did he suggest we meet here? We'll never
find each
other in this --
Mulder suddenly came into focus, stepping out of the torrent
of people to
stride toward Tim's table. He had rolled up the sleeves of his
pressed
blue shirt and loosened his tie, and had his suitcoat slung over
one arm.
Tim fought the urge to stand up and meet him halfway with a kiss
that would
stop him in his tracks, and settled for grinning madly and
holding Mulder's
gaze until he got to the table.
"So, you started without me?" Mulder smirked as he
tossed his jacket over
the third chair and sat down across from Tim. He started to
stretch his
legs out into the aisle but had to pull them back in quickly as a
waitress
balancing a tray of water glasses flew by.
"Hey -- I was getting hungry." As Mulder drew his
legs back in under the
small table, Tim was aware of their knees touching, and he leaned
in until
his nose was about six inches from the other man's. "But
mostly I was
anxious for you to get here. I missed you."
"Really?" Mulder flushed a little bit. "It's
only been three days, you
know."
"Sure, but you've been about ten states away. That's too
far." Even if
declarations like this did make Mulder uncomfortable, Tim refused
to be
circumspect.
"Well...I'm glad you're here now," Mulder said
quickly, turning away to
flag down a waitress. "How was the flight down?"
"Good, good. I got in about 11:00. I talked to the guy
next to me a
little bit. He used to be a security guard at the Smithsonian,
but he just
retired and said he'd always wanted to see New Orleans. Heard so
much
about it."
Of course Tim would strike up a conversation with his
seatmate, Mulder
thought. He, on the other hand, would immediately lean back and
close his
eyes before the plane took off, or else bury himself in some
reading
material.
Soon a waitress in a white apron and paper hat brought coffee
and another
order of beignets. While Mulder ate, Tim leaned back in his chair
and
rested one elbow on the railing of the patio. "So, do you
have some stuff
picked out for us to do?"
"A few things." Mulder brushed some powdered sugar
off his chin. "I
haven't done that much touring yet."
"Because you knew it would be more fun with me?"
"Something like that. But I have been checking out the
guidebooks, and
there's plenty to see right in the Quarter." He took a swig
of coffee and
grabbed more of the thin paper napkins to clean up some of the
sugar which
now seemed to be all over him. "How's the room? Any trouble
checking in?"
Mulder had been staying in the conference hotel thus far, but was
moving
over to a bed and breakfast now that Tim had arrived.
"Beautiful. Period furniture, balcony. Just far enough
away from the
center of things that it should be pretty quiet. Bed's kinda
small, though."
"So, you're saying we'll have to sleep very close
together?" Mulder said
quietly, raising an eyebrow.
"Hey, I'm just saying keep your elbows on your side."
"Don't I always?"
"I know you like to think so." Tim looked back out
onto the street and
inhaled deeply. The air was rich with smells: the fried dough of
the
beignets, the seafood cooking in a restaurant up the street, the
sweetness
of flowers starting to bloom. "I can't believe this
weather...January and
it's practically 80 out. When I left Baltimore it was 35 degrees
and
trying to decide if it was going to rain or sleet. I think we
need to
spend some time outdoors while we're here."
"Then let's go walk around. I'm done."
"Okay. Just...hold still." As they stood up, Tim
reached across the table
to smooth a streak of sugar off Mulder's cheek and let his hand
linger
there a little longer than was necessary.
With a few hours to kill until their dinner reservation, they
thought they
would explore the French Quarter, starting with the crowded
square in front
of them. After crossing Decatur Street, where Tim had seen the
stream of
people passing by, they arrived on a wide sidewalk between
Jackson Square
Park and a block of brick buildings, the top half consisting of
historic
apartments and the bottom half filled with souvenir shops and
restaurants.
The square itself bustled with activity. Amateur artists offered
to paint
the portraits of passersby, a trumpeter played old Dixieland
standards for
the crowds at Cafe du Monde, jugglers tossed balls and bowling
pins in the
air, and another performer whose clothes and skin were painted
silver posed
as a statue, not moving even when those in the crowd came close
and tried
to jostle him.
"Where to first?" Tim asked. "Louisiana State
Museum?" This was housed
just in front of them, to the right of St. Louis Cathedral at the
back end
of the square.
"Sure, if you want." Mulder seemed more engrossed in
the sights on the
brick sidewalk just outside the museum, including a man playing a
piano
which was painted red and covered with stickers. Apparently he
dragged it
out into the square to play every day.
"You don't sound too excited," Tim noted.
"No, it's fine."
But, as Tim predicted, Mulder breezed through the museum in
about half the
time he himself took. After the tour, Tim found him back outside,
sprawled
on a bench in the square, watching a street performer making
balloon
animals for the tourist children. He had even had time, it
appeared, to
get an Italian ice at a nearby shop, and was spooning the last of
the
orange shavings out of the cup when Tim arrived.
"Want me to get you one?" Mulder asked.
"Um, no thanks. So, we've got a little time left. What do
you want to
see? Not any museums, obviously." Though Tim was pretty much
accustomed
to Mulder's short attention span by now, he felt the need to call
him on it
occasionally.
Mulder stood up and tossed his crumpled cup into a trashcan in
a perfect
arc. "Actually, there is a museum I'm interested in, over on
Conti. A wax
museum."
"Wax figures of what?"
"Oh, famous people from Louisiana history."
"Won't that be what we just saw, only less
interesting?" Tim looked over
Mulder's shoulder into the park in the middle of the square,
where the sun
was now slanting through the trees, and raised a hand to shade
his eyes.
"No -- they also have a chamber of horrors in the
basement." Thus they
ended up spending the remainder of their afternoon prowling
through the
dark labyrinthine corridors of the Musee Conti.
****
After dinner, Mulder proposed that they take a walk down
Bourbon Street.
"I don't know that we need to spend a lot of time there, but
it's worth
seeing."
"So you've checked this out already?"
"Well, I had to spend a *little* time away from the
conference. It does
typify New Orleans, after all."
In fact, it didn't seem to Tim to be terribly different from
the Block in
Baltimore. If anything, it was tamer. For being the ground zero
of the
city's decadence, it seemed surprisingly unshocking, despite the
two or
three strip clubs in every block: one had a pair of mannequin's
legs, bare
except for high-heeled shoes, moving in and out of an opening in
the wall,
and one advertised mudwrestling matches, for which the bar
claimed they
came out into the street to find contestants. The other
storefronts were
primarily bars and tee-shirt shops.
"In other words," Tim observed, "decadence here
consists solely of drinking
beer and looking at topless women."
"You got a problem with that?" Mulder attempted a
lecherous look, but Tim
was not impressed.
"It just seems that there are more perverted things than this."
"Have anything particular in mind?"
"Don't we both see more shocking things every time we go to work?"
"Sure, whenever I go check out a pile of fertilizer to
make sure somebody's
not stockpiling it. Now *that's* terrifying."
"Oh, come on. You know what I mean. Like that case I just
worked, the guy
killing women and broadcasting it over the internet. That was
worse. I
mean, what we've got in front of us isn't exactly the court of
Caligula."
"True...but then too much perversion is not very
marketable to the average
tourist, is it? The people watching your killer on the internet
wouldn't
want to see it happening right in front of them while they're on
vacation.
But they might want to see a woman in a g-string gyrating a
little. And
even that might scare them if she got too close."
They abandoned their conversation as the music flowing from
various
doorways created a wash of sound around them, blending Top 40 pop
with
sultry R&B and more traditional jazz. Interspersed with the
strip clubs
were other bars whose signs, painted in neon colors, advertised
specialty
drinks, mostly jello shots but sometimes an original creation
like the
Tropical Itch. Deciding that they should sample all the aspects
of the
local culture, they stopped off at Pat O'Brien's for hurricanes,
tall,
strong drinks made of fruit juice and rum. They were allowed to
carry
these with them as they strolled, as long as they weren't in
glass containers.
By this time, they had traversed several blocks, and the
crowds were
thinning out as the bars got fewer and farther between. It seemed
they
were crossing over into a more residential area, and the blocks
were filled
with brick dwellings decorated with black ironwork. But as they
crossed
from the more populated area into a darker block, they found
themselves
once more between two bars, both blasting electronic dance music.
"Hey, that's the kind of stuff you like," Mulder
remarked. "Maybe they
have some Erasure they could play for you."
"Yeah, and you'd love that, wouldn't you?" Tim
observed that the exterior
of the building was nondescript. At least there were no plastic
legs
sticking out anywhere. "What do you think -- want to go in?
We should do
more than just observe the decadence from afar, wouldn't you
say?"
Mulder was looking up at the small sign over the door, which
read "Oz."
"Something tells me we're not in Kansas anymore."
"What?"
"Had you noticed the people gyrating on the bar in their underwear are men?"
"No, I can't really see anything." Tim tried to look
past the line of
people waiting to get in the door. The bar was lit in black
light, and
many patrons wore white shirts that now glowed an eerie blue. As
he took
in the details of the scene, his eyes lit on another sign near
the door:
"This is a gay bar. You don't have to be gay to come in, but
you do have
to be nice."
"Helpful of them to spell it out for us." Tim turned
to address this to
Mulder, who was already heading back up the street in the
direction they
had come from.
"So, I'm guessing you don't want to go in," Tim
commented as he caught up
to him.
"No, thanks." Mulder slowed a bit as he crossed what
now seemed to be an
invisible dividing line between the two ends of the French
Quarter.
They walked along in silence for a few minutes, then Tim
decided to pursue
the question further. "You know, Mulder, I'm not saying we
had to go in,
but if we had we certainly wouldn't have been out of place. I
mean, what's
the big deal? So it's a gay bar."
Mulder stopped on the sidewalk and faced him as the throngs of
people
flowed around them. They were underneath a sign whose blue neon
light cast
an glow on his face. "I know that...but as I look at those
men in there it
seems that I have nothing in common with them."
Tim didn't respond except to furrow his brow.
Mulder continued, "I mean, I don't think of myself that
way. Do you?" He
stepped back out into the street, which was closed to traffic, to
avoid
being jostled by a college kid stumbling along with a beer in his
hand.
"I don't know. I don't think too much about what labels
apply, I guess.
I've been attracted to more than one man, but I've also been
attracted to
more than one woman. At this point I'm attracted to you and that
decides it."
"Decides what? That you're gay?"
"I wouldn't say it's that categorical. I think it has
more to do with the
individual person."
"Yeah...I mean, I guess that's right." Mulder seemed
to be working things
out in his mind as he talked. "I can't say I've ever been as
compatible
with anyone, male or female, as I am with you. But that doesn't
mean I
look at any other men that way."
This thrilled Tim, but disturbed him at the same time.
"So you're saying
you're still attracted to women?"
"I guess, as a group, on some level. I mean, all those
years of watching
videos, they were all about women."
"So..." Tim swallowed. "You feel like this
relationship is, what, an
anomaly? That you'll eventually revert back to the way you
were?"
"No, I don't feel that way. That's not my point."
"Well, what is your point? You're starting to make me nervous."
Mulder ran his hand through his hair in exasperation, then
crossed his
arms. "I don't know what my point is, Tim. I guess it's that
I'm not
interested in men in general, I'm interested in you. Period. I'm
satisfied with that."
Tim smiled, letting out a little sigh of relief. "That
works for me." He
paused. "And hopefully it means you won't make me go in any
strip clubs."
Mulder nodded as they rejoined the crowd to head back towards the
hotel.
****
Mulder had decided a few years ago he must have reached an age
that made it
constitutionally impossible for him to sleep late. Even though
this was
now officially vacation -- they had nowhere they had to be, and
he was
certainly tired from the cumulative effects of work and travel --
he woke
up the next morning as soon as the first sunlight crept through
the crack
between the curtains. He tried to extract himself from the bed
gracefully,
but it creaked and shuddered a bit despite his best efforts,
making Tim
roll over and flop his arm onto the now-empty side of the bed.
Mulder
froze and waited for a second until he was sure Tim had fallen
back into a
sound sleep.
There was a four-cup coffee pot on the bathroom counter, a
nice amenity he
was more than willing to take advantage of. He had thought he
would sit
and look out the window while he drank a cup, checking out the
early-morning view of the Rue Conti, but then realized that
pulling back
the curtains would let in a flood of light and wake Tim. Instead,
he sat
in one of the chairs by the window, facing the bed, contemplating
the other
man's sleeping form.
He liked seeing Tim so peaceful. It seemed that the furrows
between his
eyebrows had multiplied over the last few months, as had the grey
hairs at
his temples. While Mulder knew that Tim was happy with him, and
it didn't
seem that work had been too stressful since he had returned to it
in the
fall, he still looked haggard from time to time. He even seemed
thinner
than he had when Mulder had first met him, but maybe he was just
playing
more basketball and working the pounds off that way. Mulder
almost never
asked how he was feeling, and he supposed Tim thought he didn't
even notice
details like that, but the truth was that he did care if his
lover was
tired, or tense, or worried.
Fortunately he didn't appear to be any of those things now,
and Mulder was
glad they had decided to take a few days off. Finishing his
coffee, he
decided to go down and get a paper while he waited for Tim to
stir. He
spent a little time talking to the desk clerk, trying to get some
recommendations for restaurants off the tourist track (he'd heard
that
K-Paul's really wasn't that good, despite the throngs of
out-of-towners
lined up outside), then headed back up. As he gently closed the
door
behind him, he heard some rustling from the bed, and then saw Tim
squinting
at him, unable to make out more than blurred outlines without his
glasses.
"Hey. Morning." Smiling, Tim stretched and rolled
over onto his back.
"What time is it? How long have you been up?"
"Not long. It's about 8:00. Nice day -- sun's out
again." Mulder crossed
the room at the foot of the bed and pulled back the curtains part
way.
"Good. Eventually I'll be ready to go out in it,but I
just want to lay
here for a few more minutes." As Mulder started to sit down
and take out
his paper, Tim interrupted. "Hey, why don't you come back to
bed?" He
watched as Mulder folded up the paper and laid it on the table,
then
unbuttoned his jeans, let them fall to the floor, and climbed
back in bed
in his tee-shirt and boxers.
Still on his back, Tim stretched out an arm on the other
pillow, and Mulder
slid under the covers, resting on his back with his head on Tim's
shoulder.
They lay in silence for a while, Tim smoothing back the hair from
Mulder's
forehead and listening to his breathing get deeper as he seemed
to fall
back asleep.
He never gets enough sleep, Tim thought. I don't either, I
guess, but he's
worse. Tim knew that when Mulder was alone he stayed up late
poring over
files or watching TV, and when they were spending the night
together, Tim
sometimes heard him slip out in the middle of the night and knew
he was
going downstairs to read, having never dozed off despite laying
still in
the dark for an hour or more. He hoped that Mulder would finally
let
himself relax on vacation, but it wasn't likely. He already had a
lengthy
list of must-see daily excursions that it was going to be hard to
accomplish in the time they had.
For the moment, Tim thought, I'd rather just stay right here.
He put his
free hand, which had been flung over his head, on Mulder's chest,
and as
the other man shifted slightly toward him, he tried to feel a
heartbeat
through the thin cotton. He thought he had read somewhere that
when two
people lay in close proximity to each other, their hearts start
beating in
sync. Sympathetic vibrations or something, a musical principle.
I just want to stay right here and feel his heart beating.
It was 9:00 before either of them stirred again.
Mulder spoke first. "What time is it?"
"What, afraid we're getting off your expertly-planned schedule?"
"No -- but we should get up eventually. Aren't you
hungry? I'm hungry.
We should think about breakfast."
"Yeah...let's find someplace with a really good brunch.
Somewhere we can
sit out on a balcony and eat eggs Benedict, or whatever the
specialty of
the house is in New Orleans."
"I think that should be possible." Mulder sat up and
swung his legs over
the side of the bed. "Do you want the bathroom first? I
didn't shower yet
either."
"Yeah, I'll go. You can read your paper." Then
another thought struck Tim
as he sat up behind Mulder and kissed the back of his neck.
"Or...you
could come with me."
"To conserve water, you mean."
"Sure...and to get us out of here and down to breakfast
faster," he
murmured with his lips pressed against Mulder's skin.
"I don't know, Timothy, that sounds pretty
decadent." Though he was trying
to maintain his usual ironic distance, Mulder had to admit that
he was
starting to feel the effects of Tim's efforts, the warmth of his
hand
making lazy circles against his back.
"Well, how else are you going to behave when you're in
New Orleans?" Tim
gave him a little push off the bed and headed for the bathroom.
Once they were in the tub, Mulder watched as Tim stood under
the spray
first and closed his eyes, letting the water wash over him.
Something
about this situation seemed strange -- pleasant, but strange.
Mulder
wasn't sure why. They'd been together, what, four months? They'd
been in
all sorts of intimate embraces, dressed and undressed. He knew
every
contour of Tim's body, the curve of his neck, the sinews in his
legs, the
taste of his buttery skin. But he thought this might be the first
time he
had just stood and contemplated the other man when they were --
what was
that phrase? In the all-together. It seemed appropriate: Tim,
just as he
was, reduced to his most basic essence, not speaking or moving,
just being.
Beautiful. Mulder was sure he had never thought of that word to
describe
Tim before, but there it was, and it was the right word.
Tim became aware Mulder was looking at him intently, and
opened his eyes to
see him smiling. "What?"
"Nothing. Turn around."
Tim obliged, and leaned forward against the wall as he felt
Mulder's strong
hands, covered in lather, moving across his back, kneading the
muscles as
he went. When he was done soaping everything he could reach, Tim
turned
back to face him, standing in a compliant posture, arms
outstretched.
Normally he might have felt vulnerable in this position, but
instead he
felt a kind of peace, as Mulder's hands attended to every inch of
him.
He had simultaneously longed for and resisted this for as long
as he could
remember, the sense of trusting another person totally. They were
in a
situation which ordinarily would have brought back a flood of
dark
memories, images of his uncle's face -- he had never talked to
Mulder about
that -- but instead there was nothing other than his lover's
gentle and
deliberate ministrations, aimed at making him feel good,
satisfied, purified.
After he let the water run over him, clearing away the last
traces of the
soap, he traded places with Mulder. This required a delicate
little dance,
in the middle of which their bodies brushed up against each
other, and
before he could do anything else, Tim had to take time out for a
deep kiss,
grasping the back of Mulder's neck to pull him close.
"Mulder..." he started to say before he pulled away.
"Yeah?"
The confession, the "I love you," was on the tip of
his tongue, but he
stopped short. He had no doubt about his feelings, but he did
doubt
Mulder's readiness to hear it. It could wait, he decided.
"Nothing." Tim reached for the shampoo and poured
some into the palm of
his hand.
End Part 1, continued in Part 2
------------------------------------------------------------------
Exaiphnes IV: Crescent City (2/2)
Disclaimers, etc. in Part 1
The events of the morning came back to Tim from time to time
throughout the
day. When they were having lunch at a patio table, listening to a
jazz
combo playing in a courtyard, Tim looked across the table and
thought, I
can't believe that a few hours ago I was standing there washing
his hair.
After lunch, they decided to take a walk along the
Mississippi, since Tim
had not yet gotten a good look at it. The Quarter was situated
next to a
sharp bend in the river, which made it difficult to navigate.
They watched
as barges and tugboats slowly passed each other, some on their
way to the
wharves just to the left of the Quarter, further downriver. The
two men
followed a riverside path all along the length of the French
Quarter, and
stopped in a park at the end so Tim could lean over the rail for
a better
look at the steamboats docked there.
A moment later, Tim heard Mulder's voice saying, "Good.
How's Denver?"
Then he heard a woman he didn't know respond and add something
about a
paper she'd given at the conference. Curious, Tim walked over to
join the
conversation.
At first, Mulder didn't seem to realize Tim was there, but
continued to
talk to the woman animatedly. Finally she paused and turned to
Tim,
inferring that he must be somehow connected to Mulder. She
smiled, and he
reached to shake her hand.
"Tim Bayliss."
"Sarah Schultz."
"Oh, sorry." Mulder realized the moment had passed
when it would have been
appropriate to introduce them, and tried in vain to catch up.
"Um, Tim,
Sarah was at Quantico when I was. She's a field agent in
Denver."
"Oh, so you knew Mike Giardello too?" Tim asked.
"Yeah, I think I had a class or two with him. How do you know him?"
"We work together. I'm a homicide detective in Baltimore
and he's our FBI
liaison. My lieutenant is his dad, for that matter."
"So you're down for the convention as well?"
Before Tim could answer, Mulder interrupted. "He's just
here for the
sightseeing. Listen, Sarah, it's good to see you. I'll be sure to
look
you up in Denver; I'm out that way a lot." He put out his
hand for her to
shake it.
"That would be great. If I had a card on me, I'd give you
one..." She
patted her pockets, looking over at Tim and back to Mulder.
"Well, you can
always find me at the office. Good to see you. Nice meeting you,
Tim."
"Same here."
As they parted ways, Mulder took off at a fast clip, his long
legs covering
enormous stretches of sidewalk.
"Mulder. Mulder!" Tim caught up to him and grabbed
his arm. "What was
that about?"
"What was what?"
"Oh, come on. If you didn't think there was something
wrong, you wouldn't
be trying so hard to get away. Why did you cut me off like
that?"
"I didn't cut you off."
"Yes, you did. So?" Tim wanted to hear Mulder to admit it.
"I don't know. I was just ready for the conversation to
be over." He
crossed his arms and looked over Tim's shoulder, out toward the
river.
"Right. Or you didn't want to explain who I am."
"I did explain why you were here, didn't I?"
"Yeah, sure, we just happened to run into each other
sightseeing in Jackson
Square. Why couldn't you just tell her I'm here with you, I'm
here because
you asked me to come? That is why I'm here, right?" A waver
crept into
his voice, though he was trying hard to remain calm.
"Of course. I just didn't know how to say that to
her." Mulder moved back
over toward the railing, away from the people passing on the
sidewalk.
This wasn't the best place for a quiet conversation, as the air
was filled
with the bursts of the steamboats' whistles and the shouts of
kids playing
in the park behind them.
"What if you were here with a girlfriend? Wouldn't you
have been able to
explain that?" Their fights always went like this: Tim
firing questions
and accusations and Mulder putting up more and more walls to
deflect them.
"How well do you know Sarah?"
"Not very."
"Did you date her at Quantico?"
"No. We might have had coffee a time or two."
"So would you have been more or less likely to introduce
me if you knew her
better?"
"I don't know. Would you quit hammering at me like I'm one of your suspects?"
This stopped Tim short, and when he didn't respond right away,
Mulder kept
talking. "Look, Tim, I didn't mean anything by it. I just
didn't feel
like getting into the personal details of my life with her."
"Fine. I understand if you don't have that kind of
relationship with her.
But it does leave me wondering what kind of relationship you have
with
*me*. I want to be able to say to people, to share with people,
you know,
that we're together, we're happy. Or aren't we?"
"I'm happy. I'm just not big on...public proclamations."
"Yeah, well, the end result of that is you looking like
you're ashamed to
be with me." Tim finally gave up and started walking back
towards the
Quarter, replaying the scene in his mind. What had he wanted
Mulder to
say, anyway? This is my boyfriend, my lover, the guy I've been
screwing
around with for four months? Tim didn't even know what the right
word for
him would be. Companion? Partner? Whatever -- just something
other than
what he had, or hadn't, said.
I can't believe I was going to tell him I love him, and he can
barely admit
we're together. How many times have we had this conversation? Tim
wondered. One of the first times was way back in November, when
they went
camping. Tim had tried to explain that he needed some kind of
positive
reinforcement, and Mulder had said he'd try to do better -- or
had he even
said that? He certainly hadn't done anything about it. Nothing
has
changed in three months, Tim thought. It's still me feeling all
the
emotions, doing all the work. That's it, I can't do this anymore.
By now,
he was halfway back to the Cafe du Monde, not sure exactly where
he was
going, but wanting to be away from Mulder.
The other man was closing in, however, and the phrase that
kept pounding in
his head was "I've done it again." He couldn't have
said exactly why he
kept Tim at arm's length even after all this time. It was
just...well, not
just, but partly that the depth of emotion which occasionally
rose up
through the chinks in his armor scared him. He had never felt
this
connected to anyone but Scully, and look what happened there; he
told her
he loved her -- after six years -- and her response was "Oh,
brother." But
this most recent misstep -- screw-up -- suddenly made it clear
that Tim was
capable of walking away, and he had to get him back.
"Tim? Tim? Please stop." Mulder was aware that
people were observing
their little lovers' quarrel, but he didn't care, which was
perhaps a step
in the right direction. Fortunately Tim halted, but he didn't
turn around.
"Look, you don't know how I wish I could get the last ten
minutes back. I
don't want you to be upset. What do you want me to do?"
"Mulder, if I have to make you do it, it doesn't
count." Tim took a deep
breath. "Okay, I know this is not the time or place for this
conversation,
but I think we have to have it."
Mulder acquiesced, though normally he wasn't up for this kind
of discussion
even under cover of darkness, much less in a crowded park.
"Look, I really want to be with you. But if you don't
think you can commit
to it, please tell me now."
"I want to be here. I want *you* to be here."
That's good, Tim thought, because it would be a little
difficult for me
just to pack up and go home right this minute. "Good, but I
wish you could
*show* it once in a while. I realize this isn't the kind of thing
we can
shout from the rooftops, but some kind of sign...I mean, I spent
years just
trying to get Frank Pembleton to have dinner with me; I don't
want to go on
forever trying to drag a response out of you."
"Look, I know you don't believe me, but if that's what you want, I'll do it."
"Yeah, I'll believe it when I see it." Tim started
to move forward again,
but slowed down so Mulder could keep up.
****
There was a kind of uneasy peace between them the rest of the
weekend.
Without their directly mentioning anything they'd said in the
park, it
still seemed to hang there in the air. Mulder felt a little like
he was on
probation, or trying to get some time off for good behavior. And
he wanted
to behave well, but he wasn't at all sure how to go about it.
What did I
used to do with my girlfriends? Not much, he decided, since none
of those
relationships had lasted this long.
They spent Saturday exploring some other areas of the city,
then ended up
back in the French Quarter for dinner, so they could go see a
parade that
night, the Krewe de Vieux. It was the unofficial beginning to the
Carnival
season, the only parade that rolled within the confines of the
oldest part
of the city. When they came out of the restaurant after dinner,
crowds
were already gathering, and they strolled for a few blocks,
trying to
decide where the best vantage point was going to be.
"So what goes on at these parades?" Tim asked.
"Is it kind of like the
Rose Bowl?"
"Not exactly. I'm pretty sure this one doesn't even have
floats, because
the streets are too narrow. I gather that there will be people in
costume,
tableaux satirizing things that are happening in the city. They
also throw
things."
"At us?"
"To us. You know, beads and baubles and stuff. The larger
and pearlier
the beads, the more 'valuable' they are in the Mardi Gras
economy. You
just have to get the attention of someone in the Krewe who likes
the look
of you. Hopefully you won't have to show anything."
"Show anything?" Tim raised an eyebrow.
"Drop your pants. Lift your shirt -- or maybe that only works with women."
"Well, if it comes to that..."
They found a spot at the intersection of two streets and
waited until they
heard some faint music in the distance. Soon the first wave of
revelers
started to pass by, dancing and carrying signs proclaiming the
theme of the
parade. A little hail of trinkets came towards them, and Tim
stuck his
hand out, ending up with three strings of beads clasped in his
fist.
"So, what do I do with these now that I've got them?"
"Wear them proudly. See if you can trade them in for
something bigger on
Bourbon Street later."
When they had first chosen their spot, there had not been too
many people
around, but as the parade moved forward, the crowd from down the
street had
followed it, some joining the parade, so that soon Mulder and
Bayliss were
lost in the crush of people. When Tim turned to reply to Mulder,
he
discovered they were no longer standing next to each other. Then
he heard
the familiar voice say, "Come on," and felt Mulder
grasp his hand to pull
him along. An unexpected sensation. He wasn't sure they'd ever
held hands.
They swam along in the crowd for about half a block, until
Mulder spotted a
doorway with a stoop and moved up into it for a better view,
pulling Tim
along with him. The space was barely big enough for both of them,
so they
were pressed shoulder to shoulder. Tim realized that Mulder still
had a
grip on his hand. He must not have noticed, Tim thought ruefully.
Isn't
he afraid someone will see us? But they stayed in that position
until the
parade passed and the crowd started to disperse.
Mulder turned to Tim. "Too bad we can't stay for more of
Carnival. This
is fascinating. That whole idea of the world turned upside down,
the
natural order of things in the whole city being upset for two
weeks."
"What?"
"The spirit of Carnival. The city governed by the Lord of
Misrule.
Unexpected things happen. They're even encouraged."
Tim was still in a bitter mood from yesterday, so he was
having trouble
giving himself over to the festival atmosphere. "So what's
the appeal of --"
Before he could get the sentence out, Mulder stopped the flow
of words with
a kiss. Not just a perfunctory peck on the lips, either, but a
full-blown
kiss which pressed Tim back against the doorframe they were
standing in.
Their hands were still interlaced until Mulder's arms went around
Tim's
waist, and his tongue swiped through Tim's mouth. They stood
there for a
minute or two, oblivious to the music and shouting in the air as
stragglers
passed through the street in front of them.
When he finally pulled back from the embrace, Mulder stood
looking at Tim
for a moment. "Surprised?"
"Yeah, I...wow." Tim fingered the sleeve of the
other man's shirt. "Just
don't tell me this is something I'm going to have to give up for
Lent." It
occurred to Tim that this behavior might be an aberration;
however, he
couldn't complain at the moment. He peeled himself off the
doorframe to
stand up straighter.
"Let's go back to the hotel," Mulder said.
When they got to their room, Tim unlocked the door and had
just set the key
down on the dresser when Mulder came up behind him. The other
man's arm
snaked around his waist, and he started to lay a row of soft, yet
deliberate, kisses along the back of Tim's neck, sending a rush
of heat
through his body all the way to the floor. He sank back against
Mulder,
reaching around behind him to try to grab onto his hips.
"So, I take it that feels good?" Mulder whispered into his ear.
"Mmm-hmm." It was difficult to muster up any more
coherent words at the
moment.
"Glad to know it's working." Mulder continued his
progress, ending with a
flick of his tongue in the hollow just below Tim's ear. Then Tim
felt
Mulder's hands inside the waistband of his pants, taking hold of
his shirt
to slide it up and off.
Damn -- I can't believe the effect he has on me, Tim thought
as he raised
his arms limply above his head to assist in getting disrobed. It
felt like
all his muscles had turned to water, like he might end up as a
puddle on
the floor at any moment. "I think we need to go...over
there." He
gestured vaguely toward the bed, and Mulder obligingly pushed him
in that
direction.
As Tim stretched out on the bed, Mulder straddled his waist
and started to
undo the button on his pants. Tim started to reach out for him,
to touch
his face or his hair, but the other man gently met his arm and
made him lay
it back down on the bed.
"Not right now. I don't want you to do anything but lay
back and enjoy
this."
Tim arched his back slightly as Mulder slid off his pants and
then, still
straddling him, started to kiss him. Everywhere. On the soft skin
on the
underside of his outstretched arms, down both sides of his
abdomen, between
each pair of his ribs. For the second time in two days Mulder
took his
time and explored every bit of skin he could reach. Then he came
back to
the center and started a row of kisses at Tim's navel, moving
down, down,
down, until...
Tim swore he could see little explosions of white light behind
his tightly
closed eyes as he felt his lover's mouth engulf him. Mulder had
never,
ever, done this before. It had taken a while to assemble a
repertoire of
things they both felt comfortable doing, and Mulder had seemed
not to know
how to proceed at first. It surprised Tim a little, since he
figured
Mulder should know what the male body responded to and what it
didn't.
But Mulder certainly had become adept somewhere along the way,
since there
was nothing awkward or hesitant about what he was doing now. All
rational
thoughts flew out of Tim's mind, and he abandoned himself to the
sensations
that flooded through him, the heat, the moisture, the fact that
it was
*Mulder* down there lavishing this pleasure on him, the feel of
his tongue,
his lips...then Tim couldn't hold back anymore, and felt himself
reach the
edge and plummet right over it, sinking back into the bed like
the puddle
he had thought he would turn into earlier.
When Mulder slid back up alongside him, Tim couldn't speak,
but just
enveloped the other man in his arms. For a moment they lay still,
as Tim
caught his breath and waited for the blood in his ears to stop
pounding.
He wanted to say something, but what? Thank you? Do you think
you'd like
to do that again sometime soon?
Mulder broke the silence. "How do you feel?" He
trailed one hand gently
down Tim's chest, resting it on his hip.
"Um, good, very...wow. Where did that come from?"
Not the most romantic
thing to say, but it was all he could think of.
"Well, I've been doing a little research, and it appears
that men *like*
that kind of thing."
"Yeah, I'd say it's safe to draw that conclusion."
He shifted to give
Mulder a kiss and then look into his calm hazel eyes, asking the
question
again silently.
"I just wanted to make you feel good," was Mulder's simple answer.
****
They woke up in much the same position they'd been in the
night before,
arms and legs intertwined. Tim checked the time -- about an hour
and a
half before they had to leave for the airport. As he settled back
down on
the pillow, he felt Mulder stirring.
"Is it time to get up?" Mulder asked.
"Soon. Not quite yet."
"I still have to pack." He started to push himself up off the bed.
"Yeah, me too, but there's time. Let's just lay here a
minute." It was so
rare that they had a chance to do this, Tim wanted to take
advantage of it.
They couldn't spend the night together that often -- even on
weekends it
was difficult, since Mulder often had to be out of town -- and
when they
did, usually they were in a hurry to be at work or somewhere
else. "I'm
not ready to go back to Baltimore."
"I think it's a little late to change our tickets now."
"I know, I'm just saying...when we get back, I'll have to
go back to work,
and you'll have to go back to DC. I'm sure Scully has a whole
list of
things for you to do at the office."
"Yeah, don't remind me. I called in once or twice. But
this had to end
sometime. At least we had a chance to go away -- that doesn't
happen very
often either."
"Yeah." Tim rolled over to lay his head on Mulder's
chest. "I wish you
lived closer."
"Baltimore's only a half hour away."
"Mmm-hmm." Tim waited a second. "Would you ever
consider moving?" He
hadn't really thought about it until that moment, and didn't
expect a
positive response, but he thought he'd at least throw it out.
"Mmm...I might."
"You might? Really?"
"Sure. My landlord is anxious to get rid of me
anyway...the neighbors
complain about all the disruptions in the middle of the night.
And that
apartment is a little dingy."
Tim couldn't believe he was hearing this. "That would be...really great."
"Yeah. Listen, we really better get moving or we'll miss our flight."
End
****
What did you think? Let me know at oak_girls@hotmail.com.